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"Apple Tax" Report Backfires On Microsoft

Ian Lamont writes "A Microsoft-sponsored report that describes a hidden "Apple tax" has fallen flat among the technology press. Roger Kay's report (PDF) compares various PC and Mac configurations, and claims an all-Apple household's costs would add up to an extra $3,367 over five years. Tech columnists and bloggers have slammed the comparisons and claims made in the report — even Mac-baiter John C. Dvorak calls it propaganda. However, some Mac fans still see a pro-Microsoft press conspiracy. Even if the comparisons are questionable, Kay's report and the accompanying television ads have clearly struck a nerve among the Mac faithful." Meanwhile, Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads.

993 comments

  1. How is it hidden? by AlterRNow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The price tag clearly displays it before the 1,000 unit separator..

    *scratches head*

    --
    The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
    1. Re:How is it hidden? by Caster23 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft really needs to focus on making software that works well for consumers rather than wasting money making fun of their competitors, which own very little of the market I might add. Just seems to me like a large company wanting to have it all in a system where competition fuels growth.

  2. Meh. by CWRUisTakingMyMoney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best. I don't think the Apple Tax is that high (hell, it might not even exist), but if Apple can command that price and have people pay it, what's wrong with that? It's just economics: things are worth only what people will pay for them.

    --
    Those who anthropomorphize science and/or nature already believe in an intelligent designer.
    1. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's just economics: things are worth only what people will pay for them.

      You're not just buying the thing being offered in many cases though. With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it. iPods that make you part of the trendy crowd, shoes that make you a super basketball player or a car that attracts all the babes. Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    2. Re:Meh. by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best.

      Until you use something that someone else demonizes for being "bad". Then, even if you are willing to pay for it, you are given a hard time... or worse.

      Guns, SUVs, cigarettes, fatty foods... soon PC's that are "more powerful than you need" (carbon footprint and all that...)

      --
      This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
    3. Re:Meh. by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apple's problem isn't so much the "Apple tax," it's that they just don't have a very diverse product line for varied budgets (especially on the low end). When you buy a Dell, they will have something for you whatever your budget is. With Apple, the only thing they have under $1200 is the Mini (sans monitor). There is nothing wrong with that, mind you (a lot of companies specialize in higher-end PC's too). But it does create the perception that you're not getting much "bang for your buck" (since most of their stuff is well above the value "sweet spot" in the sub-$1000 range).

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    4. Re:Meh. by WankersRevenge · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I just switched over to mac this past December, and I will say that for the first time in a long time, I found myself buying smaller twenty dollar applications that have I needed in my work flow. So in some way, my cost of ownership has risen. That said, my laptop satisfaction is off the charts. Sure, I might have been able to get the same components in a cheaper configuration, but it's the little details that make me love this computer - the magnetic power cable - the backlit keyboard - some of the mouse pad gestures - even the OS experience is a nice one. So yes, I might have a higher TOS, but I'm actually happier (ie, spending money is not a bad thing)

      Now before you label me an Apple fan boy, let me also say that I absolutely loathe that company for a gazillion different reasons. I mean really, they do shit that MS wishes they could do in their wet dreams. If my computer purchases were ideologically based, I'd be using Linux. But being more pragmatic that ideological, I decided to go with Apple and as long as they stay on an x86 chip, I see no reason choosing any other.

    5. Re:Meh. by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      This is slashdot, half the people here probably don't see any problem with carrying a bitdriver and spare wiring around with them.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    6. Re:Meh. by DreamsAreOkToo · · Score: 1

      I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best.

      And the sheeple also buy and use what they believe to be the best. This marketing initiative didn't backfire, it was never aimed at Apple users. Instead, it confirms all the rumors that Apple sucks and you're on the "right team" by sticking with Microsoft.

    7. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but look at purchasing a 5 pack of upgrades for iLife, iWork, and OSX. Compared to the MS equivalent it's cheap, so I've actually run in to Mac users that often buy it.

      Apple's gear is probably a couple hundred bucks more expensive up front, but the software's so cheap to upgrade later compared to Microsoft that it really balances out.

    8. Re:Meh. by mdwh2 · · Score: 4, Informative

      but if Apple can command that price and have people pay it, what's wrong with that?

      I don't think anyone is claiming it's wrong in the sense of it being unethical!

      But if Microsoft want to point out they are lower cost that competitors, what's wrong with that?

      Just as Apple have every right to make their products expensive if they wish, people have a right to point this out when arguing about which computer is best. The issue is about what platform is best, not whether companies have a legal or ethical right to make their products expensive.

    9. Re:Meh. by shoemilk · · Score: 1

      Until you use something that someone else demonizes for being "bad". Then, even if you are willing to pay for it, you are given a hard time... or worse. Guns, SUVs, cigarettes, fatty foods... soon PC's that are "more powerful than you need" (carbon footprint and all that...)

      And yet those are all huge industries. Good thing people are hypocrites.

    10. Re:Meh. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has caught Apple with their pants down this time.

      The price descrepanies on their laptops are a bit more obvious
      and aggregious than some of their other stuff (most notably
      the minis). Perhaps it's time for Apple to close that gap a
      little bit. Just make it less of an apparent blowout.

      The obvious retorts about quality will only get you so far.

      OTOH, don't try too hard. Mind the business. Some customers
      are inherently problematic and nearly impossible to deal
      with. Leave them to Dell.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:Meh. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent
      > product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?

      It's all marketing or lack thereof.

      Some products can sell themselves if they could only get the chance.
      Unfortunately, many of these don't get the chance for some reason
      or another. In genuine commodity markets, it's pretty easy for
      companies to survive as a niche product even without terribly
      effective marketing.

      I the beginning, they had to give Tivos away. That's how I came by mine.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    12. Re:Meh. by hey! · · Score: 1

      I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best.

      Reports like this aren't aimed for people like you.

      They're aimed at people who buy stuff for other people, using money that is not their own, which is a crappy and thankless job. And those people aren't expected to believe this stuff. It's more of a courtesy to the ones who spend their lives plodding along on the purchasing treadmill; a valentine if you will.

      It's like diplomacy. Nobody believes it when talks are described as "frank but cordial". That's just a code that says, "Even if all is not right with the world, things aren't getting much worse than they used to be." When talks are just "frank" it's time to restock your nuclear shelter.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    13. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This may be why some people buy Apple products, but, has absolutely nothing to do w/ why I do. Apple laptops are VERY nice. The new MacBooks have a very nice, sharp, bright LED display, unibody aluminum case that is very well designed, etc. So, in terms of aesthetics, their laptops are the best. The display is top notch (in my opinion)....

      but 99% of the reason why I buy Apple is the OS. OS X is a very good alternative to both Windows and Linux. Specifically, it combines a UI on par with or better than Windows with the "Unix like" functionality offered by Linux. So, on my superior laptop, I can run an OS that gives me the same capabilities as Linux, but w/ a much better user interface.

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac? What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

    14. Re:Meh. by Talderas · · Score: 1

      if Microsoft can command that price and have people pay it, what's wrong with that? It's just economics: things are worth only what people will pay for them.

      Look what I did there.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    15. Re:Meh. by guruevi · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is also the Macbook White for 999 and the Macbook Alu for 1299. If you are really cheap, you can also go to their "Refurb" or "Clearance" page and you can get things other people sent back or the previous model for a very good price (and yes, they are tested and inspected so you don't get the crap somebody else destroyed). If you go to school or college or work for the government or an educational institution you usually get a discount too.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    16. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      even the OS experience is a nice one.

      This is the only reason I use a Mac. There is a distinct trend in the operating systems released by Apple and Microsoft. Apple's OS's keeping getting better. The first modern Apple OS I used was OS 9, which was awful compared to XP. Yet in every release since OS X, the Apple OS has gotten better, while Microsoft's consumer OS has gotten progressively worse since XP (ME and VISTA).

      Microsoft should cut the ad campaign and focus on fixing what made Vista suck.

    17. Re:Meh. by flyfishin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wrong. You can get a older style white MacBook for $1000. Check any number of sites and you'll find that price. Also, when Apple rolls out a new line of products, you can usually pick up last year's model at various web retailers for even less.

    18. Re:Meh. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Never forget that your TCO for the machine also includes all the time lost to frustrations, virii, the tools to "prevent" the virii, etc.

      MS never tells you about that one.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    19. Re:Meh. by digitig · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't like Apple's hardware lock-in, but my son just got a macbook and I have to admit that although the technical spec seems low for the price the build standard is incredibly good; it looks and feels as if it's actually going to last the course, whereas most of the notebooks I've ever had have failed because of the casing or connectors. So there's clearly something missing from Microsoft's analysis (surprise!), although they're right that that pitches it at the high-end market. Does anybody have hardware reliability comparisons for Macbooks and comparably priced Windows laptops?

      Some of the stuff in the report is more blatant nonsense, of course: "A re-buy of Office for Mac starts at $150" (whose fault is that?) -- so Office for the PC is free, is it? Or do they think that all Mac users will buy Office for Windows too, just to keep Microsoft happy?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    20. Re:Meh. by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's just because MY cigarettes are less harmful to the environment than YOUR SUVs. And MY gun kills fewer people than the greaseballs YOU are sucking down.

      So, of course, SUVs and fast food are to be banned, cigarettes and guns are good.

      Since you (or someone else at least) will demand exactly the opposites, all four industries are doing ok. Welcome to hypocrit capitalism.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    21. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac? What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

      Oh, this is gonna land me in karma hell... GAMES! I beta and sometimes alpha test some of the games. Not a whole lot of em mind you, but enough. I like games. I like to blow apart zombies, or relive wars I was never in, fly amazing air and space craft, or even send my mystical death cow (taruen deathknight), the necromouser (ratongan necromancer) or any other assorted character into battle. With a mac, I just don't have the range of games I look to play. Sure the mac gaming experience is expanding, but with overpriced graphics cards and a less than enticing selection.

      For me, a mac would not be worth it for that one factor alone. For everything not games, I have an HP laptop that runs Ubuntu.

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    22. Re:Meh. by DrLang21 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm confused. Why would there be a problem with carrying a bitdriver and spare wiring around.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    23. Re:Meh. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1, Troll

      Guns, SUVs, cigarettes, fatty foods

      SUVs are stupid because they are inferior to the alternatives, and SUV owners are stupid because they were convinced as much by advertising. Cigarettes are stupid because they represent a health hazard to everyone around you (and even nicotine is itself carcinogenic -- when your body breaks it down, free radicals are produced.) Fatty food and guns, however, have to be egregiously misused before they harm anyone other than the user.

      People should not be permitted to use more than their share of resources no matter how rich or poor they are. We all live here.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    24. Re:Meh. by Opportunist · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And you think anyone who is using MS because he's a dedicated MS user needs his faith reinforced that Apple is the allmighty evil and that everyone's a dork for buying an overhyped CrApple?

      It's like saying Apple users need to be told again and again that their product makes them hip and cool, and that they're the leading crowd not despite, but because, they can afford computers that are more expensive, but also better because... oh, wait, I think you're onto something...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    25. Re:Meh. by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm missing the magsafe and the backlit but I can have mouse gestures if I want and so can every other Linux user. I have an OSX-style dock, but one that my icons don't appear under (avant-window-navigator-trunk) and so on. You can get the backlit on a PC, dunno about a magsafe-type thing, probably not. I would think about buying a MacBook Pro, but Apple doesn't seem to be able to put a quad core in one, and my next laptop purchase will be quad-core.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    26. Re:Meh. by somersault · · Score: 4, Informative

      I felt the same about my MBP at first, but even with the underclocked-as-standard graphics card that comes with it, it gets incredibly noisy when running 3D games, and after a couple of hours it just locks up due to overheating. So they may be fine for light work, but some of the engineering is actually rather poor. I ended up reading a lot of horror stories about Mac assembly over the last few years, thermal paste being applied too liberally to the CPU etc, so perhaps the machine would run better if I cleaned it out and re-applied the thermal paste myself, but I don't want to have to do that when I've already paid over a thousand pounds for the machine.

      I switched to Ubuntu because it does everything that OSX did (Avant Window Manager), but it's free. The OSX UI is pretty nice, but Ubuntu is even better once you setup compiz correctly, and Avant Window Manager is a great replacement for the Dock.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    27. Re:Meh. by homer_s · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why do you think that the image and the 'cool-factor' has no value? Maybe that is what people pay for.
      If that were not the case, why would they make cars in various colours?

    28. Re:Meh. by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yet in every release since OS X, the Apple OS has gotten better, while Microsoft's consumer OS has gotten progressively worse since XP (ME and VISTA).

      Either you have a poor memory or you're too young. ME came out before XP... it was actually the successor to 98SE. XP was substantially better (perhaps the best Microsoft OS ever released) since it was based on Win2k.

      I'll admit Vista is worse than XP, but does not come remotely close to the clusterfuck that was ME. Despite Vista's bloat and high system requirements, my HTPC running Vista has had uptimes of several weeks before I'd restart (mostly due to windows update), and it's pretty stable. ME couldn't last more than a few hours.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    29. Re:Meh. by DrLang21 · · Score: 5, Informative

      With Apple's higher end laptops, I've tried to configure an equivalent system from Dell. The result is that high end systems cost a lot of money (Dell's was a couple hundred cheaper by the way). Also keep in mind that with Apple, if your shit's broke, they send you a box next day air, you put your laptop in and and ship it back next day air with the label they give you, and then you usually get it back within 3 days, no charge if you're still under warranty. That's pretty hardcore service compared to the on-site service I've had from Dell.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    30. Re:Meh. by lseltzer · · Score: 1

      But increasingly they can't command that price. Their market share has been plummeting lately.

      ...Apple's U.S. share of the PC market reached 9 percent in third quarter, according to Gartner. U.S. recession and high average selling prices took their toll. Mac market share declined to 8 percent in fourth quarter and to 7.4 percent in first quarter 2009. Apple has even fallen below year-ago January, when U.S. share was 7.5 percent.

    31. Re:Meh. by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      Careful that sounds like commie talk.. Uncle SAM will get you for that.. :P

    32. Re:Meh. by MMC+Monster · · Score: 1

      There is an essential worth of having something that just works.

      I pay extra for my mac so I don't have to worry about it crashing while waking from sleep before an important presentation.

      I pay less of Ubuntu.

      I used to pay more for Microsoft, for compatable software. Now that I've weaned myself off PowerPoint (Keynote is awesome!), I've gotten rid of my last WindowsXP partition and only run Win2K in virtualbox for the rare website that uses citrix via an activeX control. (Which is fun, since the websites are not compatible with Windows Vista or the latest IE. :-)

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    33. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      things are worth only what people will pay for them.

      Oh my, the linux guys are so gonna get you for that.

    34. Re:Meh. by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      Yes that is true.. But then the converse is also true.
      You get your mac reduced from 1200 to 900, I get my Generic reduced from 900 to 600.
      imho MS are right you are paying for a name.. But then if you buy Ben Shermin jeans over xxx jeans then again you are paying for a Brand Name, and depending on who you are comparing against the non-brand name may or may not have better/similar build quality..
      I spent £400 on my Shoei helmet, I know part of that price is the brand but I also know their helmets are quality. My previous HJC was £40 so I really wasn't paying for the name there, the quality I still haven't discovered (not that I am complaining).
      Me personally, I ain't prepared to pay for a MAC. I'm a cheapskate that goes for the best bang for buck.

    35. Re:Meh. by E+IS+mC(Square) · · Score: 1

      >>how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?

      All those who are not suffering from inferiority complex?

    36. Re:Meh. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      Yea, and that's half the reason I run Linux, oddly enough. All the games I want to play either run just as well under Wine as they do in Windows, or _only_ run in Wine (trying to get win 98 games running in XP or Vista is a _nightmare_)

    37. Re:Meh. by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's consumer OS has gotten progressively worse since XP (ME and VISTA).

      ME was before XP & 2000.. ;)
      I'm still convinced that ME was a clever ploy to get people to buy 2 OSes in 6-9 months

    38. Re:Meh. by bidule · · Score: 1

      It's just economics: things are worth only what people will pay for them.

      You're not just buying the thing being offered in many cases though. With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it. iPods that make you part of the trendy crowd, shoes that make you a super basketball player or a car that attracts all the babes. Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?

      On the gripping hand, if you buy the same "bad product" as your neighbor, then you can bitch together. If you buy a different one, with different colors of "bad", cognitive dissonance kicks in. You don't want to be the one who bought the wrong product, so you minimize your problems while magnifying your neighbor's.

      People are buying iPods for the same reason they are buying Windows : everyone is doing it.

      --
      ID: the nose did not occur naturally, how would we wear glasses otherwise? (apologies to Voltaire)
    39. Re:Meh. by ducomputergeek · · Score: 4, Informative

      This used to be a huge problem, then Apple switched to Intel and you can load Windows via Bootcamp for gaming. I had friends get the 512MB video card option on their MBP's just so they could play the latest games.

      --
      "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
    40. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      People should not be permitted to use more than their share of resources no matter how rich or poor they are.

      Sounds like Comcast.

    41. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 1

      If that were not the case, why would they make cars in various colours?

      I dunno, why do they make assorted models of cars? Never said that 'cool' has no value. I own an iPod Touch, and I love the thing, but it makes it damned hard to love at times. Hell, I owned a HipZip with fewer quirks:
      http://www.neoseeker.com/Articles/Hardware/Reviews/iomegahipzip/

      It is a nice product tho, and despite it's odd behavior (does anyone else owning an iPod touch have it just cut to HOME in the middle of some action several times during the day?) it is a good player. I will admit to buying it for the cool factor. That and it lets me rock out to Nightwish and Eluveitie at work...

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    42. Re:Meh. by hattig · · Score: 1

      I've had an iBook for night on 4 years now. In that time I've had no downtime of any significant time (i.e., aside from software updates that might require a reboot). Everything has run well, the system has responded well, and that's on an old 1.33GHz single core CPU. Even the graphical toys in the OS are useful and helpful.

      My work 2GHz Core 2 Duo laptop has had a lot of downtime in the past 2 years. Not to the point of breaking, but just OS level issues, or software 'hanging' for periods of time for no apparent reason. Also the display is poor, the case is ugly, it's heavier than it needs to be ... it seems to get slower with use even!

      My Linux computers at home have had a lot of time dealing with issues, getting things right (because Ubuntu isn't nice out of the box, because the drivers don't work right sometimes, because an OS update can kill off installed binary drivers (VIA graphics on my HP2133 netbook) ... not so much downtime as configuration time, like a classic sports car that needs constant tinkering. I used to have time to spare, but not so much these days, so much so that the non-hassle of an Apple solution, even at +50% in price, isn't so bad.

    43. Re:Meh. by icannotthinkofaname · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac?

      Because the rest of us aren't as rich as you, Mr. Gates. Some of us simply cannot afford the extremely overpriced system. Software that can't run anywhere else, and hardware that can't run anything else (well, until recently, anyway...) - to me, it doesn't make sense in the first place. One of the common complaints is that there is so little software development for Apple platforms. Therefore, Bill, I will continue to pay your Microsoft Tax(tm) and install Linux-based operating systems. They're easier to develop for, anyway, since it's all open-source and community-driven and everyone can see everything and stuff.

      --
      Let q be a radix > 1. I am in ur base-q, killing 10 d00ds.
    44. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How 'bout the time spent learning that "virii" isn't a word?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plural_of_virus

      Yes, I'm a pedant. But at least I'm right.

    45. Re:Meh. by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      Not always. I am actually marginally anti-apple but I bought a Nano because I liked the form factor. Of course, I wasn't aware of the lock-in at the time but thankfully there's Foobar and Amarock.

    46. Re:Meh. by Idiomatick · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Really? Dell usually arrives within a few days and fixes the laptop in your house. That means no mailing. And assuming your laptop is just broken but still usable it gets you extra usable time. Plus it means you don't have to move your HDD (no idea how hard this is on macs .... thinking the Air).

    47. Re:Meh. by AlterRNow · · Score: 0, Troll

      OS X is a very good alternative to both Windows and Linux

      Personally, I regard OS X as a(n expensive) mash-up of disadvantages from Windows ( proprietary software, at the whims of a company ) and Linux ( lack of support from hardware and software manufacturers ).

      --
      The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
    48. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fair enough, I don't play games so I didn't have that in mind. Windows does provide that advantage.

      However! w/ that said, you can dual boot your Mac or run in VMware, but.. you're probably not getting your money's worth at that point.

      Let me revise my question :)

      Why would anybody NOT buy a Mac (aside from people who like to play games)?

    49. Re:Meh. by alen · · Score: 1

      when i compared a MacBook Pro with the features i wanted compared to a Dell Studio 15, the Dell came out a lot cheaper. Even after I built the Dell with the equivelant LCD and the nice graphics card to make it as equivalent as possible.

      THe Apple was $3000 and the Dell around $2000 - $2200

    50. Re:Meh. by BiAthlon · · Score: 1

      I think what you meant to say is that "People should not be permitted to use more than what I think their share of resources are..."

    51. Re:Meh. by raftpeople · · Score: 1

      SUVs are stupid because they are inferior to the alternatives, and SUV owners are stupid because they were convinced as much by advertising

      You sound angry about this topic. What's got you down, can't afford an SUV?

    52. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "OS X" style dock is a waste, IMO. It's not that good of a feature, even for a program launcher. It's more for flash and impressing new customers than for actual usaghe

      Can't speak for laptops, but every keyboard I've used for years has been backlit. This isn't some Apple "innovation".

      Oh, and Finder is absolute garbage. Worst file manager in an OS I've ever seen.

    53. Re:Meh. by troll8901 · · Score: 1

      Rest in peace, Gravis Ultrasound.

      Xandros Presto will be a product that I'll be watching, to see how many copies it'll sell (US$20 per copy).

    54. Re:Meh. by AmaranthineNight · · Score: 1

      When my touch cuts to home it's usually a buggy application crash that does it. What are you using frequently that might not be programmed quite right?

    55. Re:Meh. by Otter+Popinski · · Score: 1

      I have a problem with carrying a bitdriver and spare wiring around.

    56. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 3, Informative

      This used to be a huge problem, then Apple switched to Intel and you can load Windows via Bootcamp for gaming. I had friends get the 512MB video card option on their MBP's just so they could play the latest games.

      You still haven't convinced me. Why I should pay more now (Apple License and a Windows License) for a mac with bootcamp, when I can just have my regular ole PC (Just a windows license) to play games?

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    57. Re:Meh. by Insanity+Defense · · Score: 1

      What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

      I can custom build (or have custom built) my own machine to my specifications. No limits based on what Apple chooses to sell as a configuration. The only limits are the available components

      I've done this ever since I had a 386 custom built for Windows to now where my Windows 2000 Pro machine and my Linux machine are ones I built myself. My machines are built with quality components and are far more stable and powerful than the run of the mill machines.

    58. Re:Meh. by elfprince13 · · Score: 1

      I've been using Apple's computers since the System 7 days. 3 Apple computers lasted us 18 years (7, 8/9, and 10.3). Obviously other computers (read: laptops, and a couple junk Dells that I turned into Linux boxes) were owned in this period, but those three were our primary computers, and I just now bought my own Macbook Pro. Most Windows users I know buy new machines every 3 or 4 years, and are complaining that its an "old machine" after 2.

    59. Re:Meh. by digitig · · Score: 1

      Yes, but after about 18 months the case on my Dell was falling apart, similarly a Sony Vaio, and after a similar period keys were falling off my son's IBM Thinkpad. Will the same happen to my son's Macbook? Well, I don't know, but it doesn't look as if it will.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    60. Re:Meh. by Miseph · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Because they, unlike you, find OSX to be slow and irritating. I much prefer Windows' and Linux' UIs to OSX, and my experiences with OSX have not been the blindingly fast euphoric "just works" experiences that iFans and Apple claim they are. I have absolutely no incentive to pay extra for a system that runs a piece of software that I hate and don't need for anything.

      How's that for a reason not to buy a Mac?

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    61. Re:Meh. by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it. iPods that make you part of the trendy crowd, shoes that make you a super basketball player or a car that attracts all the babes. Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?"

      It is only an 'image' thing, if you take this stuff out, and try to show/flaunt it in public so people can see you with it. I have some mac stuff, but people rarely see it. I use my computers at home. When I take out my iPod or shuffle...no one sees me using it at my desk at work, and at the gym, the shuffle is pretty hard to see clipped to the bottom of my shirt...I don't use the crappy white earphones that come with the thing...I use some higher ended Shure ones, but, no one knows what those are looking at them.

      Sometimes, you DO get what you pay for. I prefer to get Polo button down dress shirts. Yes, they are expensive (actually I have access to a store discount which helps a LOT). I don't wear them because of the horsey on them, I find that they :

      A. They look good

      B. They LAST a long time.

      That last part is important. I get many many wears out of the shirts without them fading or falling apart. I tend to run all my stuff to the laundry service, so I know that is rough on the clothes, and with ironing and heavy starch...well, it takes a good quality shirt to stand up to that.

      I like to save money as much as anyone, but, I find some things need to be looked at over the long haul for value. Sometimes, the name brand that is more $$, IS the better value. I feel the same way about cookware. I save and spend money on All-Clad stainless steel cookware. Yes, a fry pan is over $100. But, it works better than most cheap stuff I've tried. And I will likely never need to buy another one the rest of my life. I like Wusthoff Trident knives....they are $$, but, again, they are quality and last forever.

      Are these status symbol things? Not to me...no one ever really sees me use them or knows I do. I research and buy things I want that are the highest quality I can afford.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    62. Re:Meh. by dzfoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >> Why I should pay more now (Apple License and a Windows License) for a mac with bootcamp, when I can just have my regular ole PC (Just a windows license) to play games?

      Because with the Windows PC you only get games; at least that was the only advantage you mentioned. With the Mac, you get a more polished experience in many other aspects of computing--plus the games by using BootCamp and Windows.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    63. Re:Meh. by windsurfer619 · · Score: 1

      hell, it might not even exist

      Because we all know profit grows on trees.

      Someone's been drinking the cool aid...

    64. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because with the Windows PC you only get games; at least that was the only advantage you mentioned. With the Mac, you get a more polished experience in many other aspects of computing--plus the games by using BootCamp and Windows.

      -dZ.

      Polished how? You haven't explained to me anything I can't already do in my Windows Desktop or my Ubuntu Laptop. All you've done is throw a buzzword or two my way.

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    65. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until you're JUST OUT OF YOUR AppleCare warranty. I've had LOTS of Macs, my first one being a 512ke (and an Apple ][ before that). I'm a mac fan. Supporter. Really.

      My most recent mac was an iMac G5 20" 2.0GHz ALS. It was a very nice machine. It died at about 38 months (Extended Applecare was 36 months). Apple wouldn't help me. 3 visits to the store, 2 or 3 long calls to Apple. An email to Steve (never heard anything).

      So, all the proprietary hardware just *died* one day, and I was left with a big paperweight. If it was an ATX machine I could have easily gotten it running again. It wasn't. It was dead.

      It wasn't bad caps in the PSU or the motherboard, either. It was another weird death of the G5 boards. I ended up buying a 1.6GHz G5 17" off Craigslist with bad caps and fixed it. Swapped drives and I'm working again.

      I'm using XP now, and, honestly, its not that bad. The only thing I really miss is iMovie. I hate to admit this, but I'm actually more productive on my XP Box. (Oh, for you linux folks out there, I ran Ubuntu for 12 months straight, and there were enough quirks to make me move back to XP).

      So, long story short, I'm going to think REALLY HARD before I buy Apple hardware again. They may have lost a long-time customer and his family. Is it unfair of me? After all, I got 38 good months of use out of it. Maybe. Then again, its my money.

    66. Re:Meh. by quisxt · · Score: 1

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac? What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

      Can you buy a netbook with OS X on it? How about a thin and light laptop with an excellent keyboard, or an expandable desktop that doesn't cost at last $2.4k.

      OS X is a great operating system, but it also locks you in to Apple's very limited choices for hardware.

    67. Re:Meh. by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      Apple's problem is not a problem at all. While Microsoft if shutting down some of its business divisions and culling its workforce, Apple has announced increased growth (slower than expected, but still incremental).

      It seems to me they are doing pretty good.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    68. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, multiple-boot sucks. Better to just get another machine.

    69. Re:Meh. by geekboy642 · · Score: 1

      Yes. Fanboys say things that enforce their fanboy-ism. Rational people tend to just look at them like they're silly, and then get back to work on whatever computer they happen to prefer.

      --
      Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
    70. Re:Meh. by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      How about spending some time to spell "about" properly, without cute colloquialisms.

            I call your pedantry, and raise you a grammar nazi.

            -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    71. Re:Meh. by NtroP · · Score: 0

      I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best.

      And the sheeple also buy and use what they believe to be the best. This marketing initiative didn't backfire, it was never aimed at Apple users. Instead, it confirms all the rumors that Apple sucks and you're on the "right team" by sticking with Microsoft.

      Amen. I'm loving these ads! The types of people who will be persuaded by these ads, instead of making an intelligent, independent decision are exactly the type of people who need and deserve to be running windows on a $350 Dell. They are exactly the type that would eventually destroy Apple with their ignorance and mindset.

      The same is true for Linux. In order for someone to use Linux they need to make a conscious decision about their computing environment. They have to make the deliberate choice to not just use the "default" but to seek out something better. Those people who are discerning, "thinking" computer users are the ones we want on Linux. Leave the lowest-common-denominator crowd on windows where they belong and are happy and stop bothering them about switching - "casting pearls before swine" and all that.

      Over time the non-MS market shares will steadily grow, but they will overwhelmingly consist of the best, thinking, knowledgeable computer users, while MS will be overwhelmingly left with the idiocracy. It's hard to understand from this side of the tracks, but the superior product is often not the best choice for most people. If making the best use of a superior product requires an intelligent, motivated, discerning person, then it most certainly is not suited for those who watch these ads and change their buying habits based on them.

      --
      "terrorism" and "pedophilia" are the root passwords to the Constitution
    72. Re:Meh. by AlterRNow · · Score: 1

      Troll?! Damn, I'm not entirely sure who I upset!

      --
      The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
    73. Re:Meh. by NtroP · · Score: 1

      OTOH, don't try too hard. Mind the business. Some customers are inherently problematic and nearly impossible to deal with. Leave them to Dell.

      Exactly! Those who buy based on price alone are NOT the quality of customer Apple wants. I'm loving these ads - they're separating the wheat from the chaff. MS and Dell can lead the race straight to the bottom and I'll applaud them the whole way.

      --
      "terrorism" and "pedophilia" are the root passwords to the Constitution
    74. Re:Meh. by Phrogman · · Score: 1

      I use a 20" Imac, my wife has a MacBook. We use bootcamp and XP to play our games and so far everything is pretty peachy. When we want to do anything serious, we reboot into OS/X and do it there because the user experience to be had there far far outstrips anything on the Windows side. To be honest, after being a Microsoft user from 1988-2007, I have to say that OS/X feels professional, well designed and completely reliable, whereas Windows XP feels like an toy OS. Its amateurish, its unreliable (although better by far than its predecessors), and the UI design is horrid by comparison to OS/X. It is required for my games at the moment so I endure it. As for the hardware, its gorgeous, sleek, quiet and I have yet to encounter a problem. My Windows desktops were none of the above, and I was always having to fix something, not to mention the bi-annual reinstall of XP to clean out the cruft. I think anyone with a brain & who can afford it, will buy Apple - even if you want to wipe it to install Ubuntu. The rest of you either need to save more to get a real system, or will have to settle for substandard windows systems running MS Vista :P

      --
      "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    75. Re:Meh. by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      You can also bring your Mac to an Apple Authorized Service Provider; simple repairs can be done on-site, or they'll ship the machine to Apple if necessary. I've been quite pleased with Apple's service.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    76. Re:Meh. by timbck2 · · Score: 1

      I call FUD.

      "Extremely overpriced"? No. Slightly overpriced? Yes.

      "Hardware that can't run anything else"? Not since January 2006.

      "So little software development for Apple platforms"? Bullshit.

      "[Linux is] easier to develop for, ... since it's all open-source"? Apple's SDK is available for FREE, and almost all open-source projects are readily ported to OSX.

      --
      Absurdity: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion. -- Ambrose Bierce
    77. Re:Meh. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I'm open to discussion on what that limit should be, but it's clear that the world is out of whack right now. If you don't think that putting out ten times as much CO2 year per year on average than volcanism is going to change the planet, think again. We already know that CO2 from volcanism can have significant effects on climate. And do I need to play the fucking oceanic acidity harp again? There are reasons other than "global warming" to be concerned about CO2 levels.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    78. Re:Meh. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I like the dock, actually. I just don't like Apple's implementation. I used trayer to put my system tray in the lower right and I have my dock set up approximately how I envision it. Until something like Metisse becomes practical for daily use, compiz+emerald+awn+trayer+gnome-do+ggl-gtk seems to provide everything I demand in a desktop. I only wish that Xgl were alive, kicking, and accelerating compiz further.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    79. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True... but don't you think that the quality of the product is part of the reason Mac products have that "cool factor"?

    80. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would. The only problem (specifically with ipods) is that there doesn't exist similar products. When I was in the market for a hdd music player I choose a creative zen, slightly more expensive, but I didn't want a ipod. When it broke, I cashed in my warranty only to find out they didn't sell creative zens and I was forced to get a ipod. Which happened to be 20gigs more, and slimmer. I hate the ipod interface, it's difficult to navigate my music, and doesn't let me organize my music the way I want. Problem is if you want a hdd mp3 player, ipods are pretty much the only choice.

      ipods were trendy a few years ago, now it's just what we call a mp3 player. Kinda like how we refer to all facial tissues as 'kleenex'.

    81. Re:Meh. by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      of course the WHOLE PC market is down 20-30% since last year. Apple is suffering LESS than guys like Dell and HP, let alone all the companies in the "other" category. And Apple sells the most expensive SKUs with the highest profit margin.

      How many $2000 computers is Apple selling? How many is Dell selling? What the margin on those $399 specials Dell has? What about all the margin Microsoft has lost selling XP on netbooks?

      Apple needs to correct their pricing, but not as much as people think. People buy Macs to buy into "Apple". Macs are perceived as something worth "saving" for and they hold their resale value better should you need to ebay it.

      Microsoft's whole argument falls apart for one reason.. they don't sell hardware, the argument falls apart for Dell and HP because they don't write their own Operating Systems and PC software. Only Apple does BOTH things, so as a company and as a product it's not the same as M$ + OEM. After some of the netbook issues one would argue Wintel OEMS have almost no experience making software other than getting MS Windows just barely running with drivers supplied by chip makers. There's no differentiation between OEMS anymore because people want "Microsoft" computers, I'd argue that the PC market is a "race to the bottom" is not exactly what Microsoft should be selling on TV!

    82. Re:Meh. by fdisk-o · · Score: 1

      Dear Roger(k@ndpta.com), we're feeling sorry for you that you gave up your credibility and any chance of adding value to the technology-interested community in exchange for money from Microsoft. We (technology professionals) know from much personal experience that the reason behind Mac system purchases is rarely based on "cool" in the business world. Instead, the reason is simply greater value through a much more stable operating system, hardware that is designed more robustly (longer MTBF), and considerably greater ease of technical support due to fewer OS related problems. Don't forget about Linux either. With the capability of running on a larger range of hardware than Microsoft products and the clear security advantages due to available source code you can evaluate yourself, Linux is beginning to threaten Microsoft as it's deployment in the workplace gains greater popularity. Even now, worldwide many governments, schools, and workplaces are realizing the benefits of a stable and open platform. My condolences go to you.

      --
      -write unit tests, or else.
    83. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use Boot Camp to run Windows on my Mac laptop, and it works just fine for playing games too- best of both worlds.

    84. Re:Meh. by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Dual boot. Tada!

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    85. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1, Interesting

      That doesn't mean jack. I can find an HP laptop with the EXACT hardware specs of any Apple laptop, for approximately $700 cheaper, and for the additonal $40 for a USB-EFI loader drive and another $150 for the OSX install disc, I can install OSX on my PC AND GET THE EXACT SAME EXPERIENCE FOR LESS.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    86. Re:Meh. by PIBM · · Score: 1

      Quiet ? We have two IMac 20" at work, along with 10+ PCs, all of the same age (less than 6 months). Both IMac fans are dying at the moment and will need to be replaced very soon. Didn't had any problem with the PCs.

      If you need to keep reinstalling your XP, you are doing something wrong.

      You can like the 'flashy' interface of the mac, but it's nowhere as effective as the one from windows / linux.

    87. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He would think that "cool-factor" has no value because this is Slashdot, and the crowd here ain't never been cool.

    88. Re:Meh. by reygahnci · · Score: 1

      Do what I do, I have a Mac I use for development and 90% of my usual stuff. I play WoW on my Mac, and if I ever feel the NEED to play a windows-only game (Counter-Strike, L4D, etc), I switch over to my windows installation ON my Mac and play for a couple hours, then switch back. Boot Camp really does make the difference. One day I'll be able to play all my games on my Mac without restarting, but this is a VERY happy medium until then.

    89. Re:Meh. by vertinox · · Score: 1

      You still haven't convinced me. Why I should pay more now (Apple License and a Windows License) for a mac with bootcamp, when I can just have my regular ole PC (Just a windows license) to play games?

      Because it can run OS X and WinXP?

      Whereas, if I buy a PC, I still have buy a Mac to run a second computer to run OS X.

      Though I could have maybe hacked OS X to run on a PC, but if I was going to break the EULA and do that, I could have done the same thing and not pay for the license for WinXP on the Mac.

      Look... Games is not really an excuse to not buy a mac if you were buying it for other reasons.

      In all reality, if you were really wanted to get into games you'd probably buy an Xbox360 anyways or only use your gaming rig so customized you don't do anything with it except specifically to play games and nothing else.

      If you are a casual gamer, then there is no reason you can't use bootcamp on a mac.

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    90. Re:Meh. by crmarvin42 · · Score: 1

      polish != function.

      An OS with more polish doesn't necesarily do anything more than one with less polish. If anything it does less to avoid confusion, or at least less from inside the GUI. The polish comes from how easy/intuitive/quickly/etc. it does them.

      I've used both Windows and OSX. Windows and Leopard both do just about the same things, I've just found that it's easier to do the things I want to do using a mac running Leopard, than a PC running XP or Vista. I've got plenty of annecdotal evidence from my family and friends that those not willing to devote a lot of time to learning their OS are more capable on a Mac than a PC. I chalk that up to the OS being more polished and aimed specifically at those uninterested in really learning about their OS.

      Windows IMO is aimed primarily at businesses that employ OS 'experts' so they don't need to bother polishing things. They've made tons of money by selling to corporations that then act as free advertising aimed at their employee's. That's not working as well as it used to and MS is trying to add more polish to the OS (Aero in Vista), but we've yet to see that really translate into a better user experience for the non-geek users that make up the majority of computer buyers in the retail market.

      --
      Bureaucracy expands to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy.-Oscar Wilde
    91. Re:Meh. by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has caught Apple with their pants down this time.

      Quite the opposite. Think about: Apple can charge a lot more for an identical computer than Dell, and the only difference is the operating system. At least that is what the Microsoft adverts tell us. So the difference between the value of MacOS X and the value of Vista is (lots of dollars). Doesn't sound too good for Microsoft, does it?

    92. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      I call FUD on your FUD.

      My HP laptop with exact specs to the MBP (when I bought it) cost $1000 less and came with more features (dual hard drive bays, an actual upgradable graphics card, etc.)

      Your Apple laptop can't natively boot any other modern OS without either the OS being modified to boot in an EFI system or by using a VM or other software. For $40 I can buy an EFI bootloader stick and install OSX on my laptop.

      The rest you said isn't FUD - plenty of development on Apple machines (Pixar, anyone?) and ease of development is mainly dependent upon the programmer's skill.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    93. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cheapest Mac is $600. Why would I pay the price of two desktops for that piece of un-tinkerable junk?

    94. Re:Meh. by Divebus · · Score: 1

      The "older style" white MacBook has the updated guts, almost equal to the Aluminum (no LED backlight) - for $999, $950 if you go through a dealer and ask nice.

      --

      Most of the stuff on /. won't survive first contact with facts.
    95. Re:Meh. by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      IMHO, WinME wasn't the clusterfuck everyone thinks it is, or remembers it being, except for the fact that it broke a LOT of Windows 95/98 apps that had deep DOS roots. It's USB support was better than Windows98s, but it was not as fast.

      WindowsME was the OEM ass-kicking that said, get ready for WindowsXP, we're doing things COMPLETELY differently and DOS is goodbye for good.

      For that, I'll be forever greatful for ME. It broke the chain of crappy DOS apps that I had to support for going on a decade. :-)

    96. Re:Meh. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      For those who have never heard of it (and are failing to find anything via Google), it's avant window navigator, not manager.

      --
      $ make available
    97. Re:Meh. by techess · · Score: 1

      The whole games thing is a great point. I'm not an advertising person, but when I saw the MS tax adds I thought it was going to turn off the general public and really only appeal to the fanbois. MS marketing should be the best in the business with all the money they have but so much of their advertising, like this ad, are terrible.

      I think they would have been better served by having the ad be people saying, "I love my new Macbook Pro. The hardware is great and it looks so cool. As much as I like it I find that I miss playing games and using all the great Microsoft only software that I need for my school/job. So I went to the store and bought Vista and now I run it on my Mac. It was so easy to do and works great!"

       

      --
      Don't anthropomorphize computers. They *hate* that.
    98. Re:Meh. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Your dissing of Windows wasn't enough to save you from your dissing of Mac (especially) and Linux (to a lesser extent). IANAMod.

      --
      $ make available
    99. Re:Meh. by timbck2 · · Score: 1

      My HP laptop with exact specs to the MBP (when I bought it) cost $1000 less and came with more features (dual hard drive bays, an actual upgradable graphics card, etc.)

      I bet it weighs at least 2 lbs. more and is at least 1/2" thicker too.

      Your Apple laptop can't natively boot any other modern OS without either the OS being modified to boot in an EFI system or by using a VM or other software. For $40 I can buy an EFI bootloader stick and install OSX on my laptop.

      For $0 I can install BootCamp and rEFIt and install practically any OS I want on my Macbook. It's not rocket science to "modify" the OS to boot in EFI.

      --
      Absurdity: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion. -- Ambrose Bierce
    100. Re:Meh. by capedyeats · · Score: 1

      I love this nonsense peddled by Mickeysoft about the apple tax. Guess what, I am quite happy to pay the apple tax (which doesnt exist) for a stable, well designed product with a sublime operating system. Indeed, what is more delicious is the nix under the hood of Mac OS X and I can run just about everything I run on the best OS in the world -- Linux (Sorry, Mac fans). What Mickeysoft fails to understand (maybe its cognitive dissonance) is: You always pay a premium for quality. And for once Dvorak is right, improve your products and stop spending money trying to look cool. Indeed, as the redhead says on the ad, she is not cool for a MAC, guess what she isn't and if the other denizens wish to shell out money for HP's and Vaio's, please go ahead. I will sit back and sleep well when all the viruses, the unexplained crashes and other droppings show up on your machines "A little learning is a dangerous thing; drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring: there shallow draughts intoxicate the brain, and drinking largely sobers us again." Alexander Pope

    101. Re:Meh. by PIBM · · Score: 1

      That totally depend on what you are doing with your computer. It slowed down a little in the last few years, but if you wanted to keep up with the latest games you had to upgrade.

      Here's a computer list for you

      '88, Intel 386DX33, 2MB to 4MB of ram
      '94, Cyrix 486DX4-100, 8 to 16MB of ram
      '97, Intel Pentium MMX 166mhz, 32 to 128MB of ram
      '99, Intel P3-500, 256MB-1GB of ram
      '03, AMD Athlon 64 3200+, 1GB of ram
      '06, Intel Core 2 Duo E6600, 2-6GB of ram

      It spawns 21 years, which match the 3-4 years duration of each computer. But you will notice from the spec that each new computer was a lot stronger than the previous one. The P3 500 lasted the longest (4 years, and got 3 more years of use from my brothers) while the AMD athlon was the most deceiving computer I owned, ie, if I didn't need to change my P3-500 for some simulation computations that needed to run in real time, I would have waited a year or so before changing. But it's still in use as I write this by my grand parents, to browse the web & all.

      Most of the changes I've had were dictated by the requirements of my useage that changed. If for all your 18 years, you always kept doing the same thing (comptability in a terminal?) then you obliviously don't need to change your computer.

      Considering that most of the windows user you might know might have windows for games, and the way games evolved, it's normal that they changed their computer more often...

    102. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see from your sentence structure that you are German. ... please allow me to humbly correct your English: it's spelled fan boi

    103. Re:Meh. by gander666 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I just have to respond to this. I had a Latitude 620 that had a bad video out port. Called the dell tech. Brought out new memory (?!?!?) and a motherboard. In the space of 8 days, it took 4 visits from Dell, 3 motherboards, 2 sets of RAM, and since the tech forgot on the last visit to plug in the fans, and the system overheated and damaged the CPU, a new CPU. For good measures, they finally upgraded me to a refurbed 630, but that was the worst tech support experience I have ever had.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    104. Re:Meh. by babyrat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was going to respond to this post indicating that it is not the same experience. The hardware itself, totally outside of specs is much nicer on a MBP than any HP. Then I was going relate my experiences of loading OSX on HP laptops (among others)...hunting for drivers, manually editing files to allow the latest hardware to be recognized bythe existing drivers, not using auto-updates because they screw up those drivers and cause kernel panics after reboots.

      and then a thought about this statement for a bit...

      That doesn't mean jack. I can find an HP laptop with the EXACT hardware specs of any Apple laptop,

      and decided that this statement in response to that comment would sum it up:

      No you cannot.

    105. Re:Meh. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      In 18 months Moore's Law will kick in anyway. If you're going to argue 18 months vs. 2 years, read this quote from the above link:

      [snip]. Despite popular misconception, he [Moore] is adamant that he did not predict a doubling "every 18 months". However, an Intel colleague had factored in the increasing performance of transistors to conclude that integrated circuits would double in performance every 18 months. [boldfacing added, italics in original]

      --
      $ make available
    106. Re:Meh. by somersault · · Score: 1

      Ah my bad, sorry.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    107. Re:Meh. by bemymonkey · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's just it - a few years back I was dead set on buying a Mac (Powerbook G4 IIRC), but couldn't afford it. A buddy of mine got the 12" version, and every time I sat down with it, I was in heaven.

      These days, I've actually got a bit of cash, and there's no way I'd spend it on Apple when I can get the same hardware quality somewhere else. And that's not because everyone's caught up to Apple... it's because Apple's gotten worse.

      Overheating, creaky laptop casings, proprietary (in the sense that nobody else uses them and you need adapters to hook up a regular monitor) display connectors, the annoyance of iTunes... No way I'm paying $500 more than I need to for that - especially when I know the hardware's going to be outdated in three years anyway.

      Hell, since that time I was gassing for a Powerbook G4, I've upgraded/switched out 5 systems. If I'd gone for Macs each time and the price premium had been $500 each time, I'd be out $2500, which buys a used car or a few guitar amps...

    108. Re:Meh. by Stewie241 · · Score: 1

      Seems like it increases the Apple tax (if it does exist), if you have to purchase a Windows license above and beyond.

    109. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      For $999 you can get an HP laptop with equivalent specs of a mid-end Mac product with more features like dual hard drive bays and multiple video outs (HDMI, VGA, Component and S-Video) on-board.

      My DV9825 was only $999 ($1300 with extended 3-year "You shoot it, we'll fix it for you" warranty.)

      Let's see, here. Let's find a $999 Apple Laptop to compare with my HP. Well, there's only ONE on the entire site that "starts at $999" so I have to use it.

      http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MB881LL/A?mco=MzE2NjMyOA

      There it is - 13-inch White Macbook. Let's go over the specs, shall we? $999 Macbook first mention in each line, $999 HP DV9825 second mention.
      To start, Screen - 13" screen. 17" on my HP
      Processor - 2GHz Core 2 Duo. Okay, that beats my 1.83GHz Core 2 Duo, just barely.
      Memory - 2GB PC-5300 DDR2. Mine came with 4GB.
      Storage - 120GB HDD - I have 320GB and have an additional hard drive bay.
      Keyboard - The Macbook doesn't have a 10-key pad, mine does.
      Mouse - I can turn mine off with the touch of a button if I want to attach a real mouse. Not really much of a 'feature' but handy for gaming.
      Video - 512MB 9400GS nVidia card. Mine is a 512MB 8600GS, *BUT* mine's an MXM card so I can actually upgrade. Hooray discrete graphics!
      Adapters - Video out on your Apple will cost you. My HP has all outputs built into the laptop as separate ports, with the exception of the S-Vid and Component, which has a dongle that comes with the laptop.
      Remote - $19 extra for it for your Macbook. Standard with my HP.
      Both have a webcam and such built into the screen bezel. I have an extra strip of buttons for controlling audio and video playback on my system above my keyboard. I also have a LightScribe drive standard - I get special discs and I can burn the label directly on using the laser. Also, there's an additional expansion port on the HP to allow for far more stuff attached.
      Warranty - $249 for Applecare with no mention of user-inflicted damage, $299 for mine and it covers user-inflicted damage.
      The Macbook would probably stomp my HP in battery life. Maybe not if I could put an equivalent load on the Macbook (run Fallout 3 or L4D on it and we'll see how long that battery lasts!)

      Overall, the HP gives you way more for your money.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    110. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ouch. Worst I had was when they put it back together they put a screw through the speaker wire which killed audio later. And I've used dell like over a dozen times.... I guess it depends on your area for the dispatch people.

    111. Re:Meh. by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

            I call your pedantry, and raise you a grammar nazi.

      Does that comma belong?

      --
      $ make available
    112. Re:Meh. by somersault · · Score: 1

      Well my MBP has a standard DVI connector and I used Songbird and VLC instead of iTunes, but I did notice the casing was slightly warped and creaky in one corner a couple of days after I got it, and the aluminium lid has a dent in it which wouldn't have happened with plastic.. I might buy a Pro desktop if I was looking for a beast of a machine, but as for laptops I'm actually happier with my Dell Mini 9 which cost literally a quarter as much as the MBP did, with a 32GB SSD drive, much better battery life and as much power as I need for my day to day work (bit of web development, bit of remote server administration, with Firefox, Evolution, Pidgin and Exaile running most of the time using less than half of my 1GB of RAM and no pagefile usage whatsoever), but without the annoying fan noise and heat issues of the Mac, which I haven't decided a use for yet.. it's no good as a gaming rig, but it's complete overkill for most other sub-gaming tasks too.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    113. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this issue of choice is really the difference. And it's not just budget. Look at the netbook market? There is clearly a desire amongst the Mac community for a netbook based on all the photoshop mockups, but Apple fans have to patiently wait for Apple to decide on wheter to get into this market.

    114. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Quality of customer - as in easily misled?

      Having worked as an Apple laptop repair tech, and as an HP laptop repair tech, and having repaired many other brands of laptop as side jobs, I really don't want to touch another Apple product.

      Look here.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    115. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You also don't get the ability to stick an ATI HD4800X2 into your Mac, which is what I wanted a few months ago. (I'm not talking about a laptop.)

      The Mac equivalent of the nVidia card was two generations behind at the time... so...

      Hey, technically speaking, I can still buy a PC and stick OS X on there and run it. There will probably be some difficulties but it is possible...

    116. Re:Meh. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      I'll admit, I haven't read the article, but...

      but 99% of the reason why I buy Apple is the OS.

      this is why I would refer to it as a tax. Just like having Windows included with a PC is called the Microsoft Tax.

      Seriously, isn't OSX why most people buy a Mac? I know it's the only reason I considered buying one before.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    117. Re:Meh. by vmbsd · · Score: 1

      Ah, this was stated in one of the parent posts. I can spell it out for you though. Windows does not provide a Unix environment. Ubuntu does not provide an "excellent" UI. X-Windows + the various window manager are nice, usable, more than I could hope to build myself BUT they are not, IMO, nicer than the UI inclued w/ OS X. So - a Mac provides you with the following advantages: 1) good build quality (aluminum case, bright LED, etc) 2) Unix system w/ very solid UI 3) retain ability to run Windows/play games. Thus, if you buy a Mac AND dual boot it, you can have both full support for games and a Unix system w/ a "best of breed" user interface. If you buy a non-Apple system you can still have Windows and Linux/BSD, etc. However, the Linux/BSD/X-Windows based UI won't be as nice. In fact, you can even buy an Apple laptop and run Windows/Linux. You're still ahead due to the nicer laptop.

    118. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until you use something that someone else demonizes for being "bad". Then, even if you are willing to pay for it, you are given a hard time... or worse.

      Oooh, I'm so scared. The evil masses are going to lynch me because I... what now? Eat unhealthy foods? Own a gun? Drive an SUV? Smoke? Use a powerful PC? I don't think so.

      If you honestly believe that people are out to get you for these things then you need help.

    119. Re:Meh. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      This will probably change when apple puts some decent graphics cards into their expensive machines.

      Microsoft is the taxer though. Just when you have everything the way you want it, they pull the rug out from under you by not providing security updates for XP. Why don't they just keep improving and selling XP? Like adding direct x 10 support or whatever instead of trying to be my nanny.

    120. Re:Meh. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 3, Funny

      I was going to respond to this post indicating that it is not the same experience. The hardware itself, totally outside of specs is much nicer on a MBP than any HP. Then I was going relate my experiences of loading OSX on HP laptops (among others)...hunting for drivers, manually editing files to allow the latest hardware to be recognized bythe existing drivers, not using auto-updates because they screw up those drivers and cause kernel panics after reboots.

      and then a thought about this statement for a bit...

      That doesn't mean jack. I can find an HP laptop with the EXACT hardware specs of any Apple laptop,

      and decided that this statement in response to that comment would sum it up:

      No you cannot.

      Allow me to summarize what you said in the proper /. way:
      [citation needed]

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    121. Re:Meh. by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

      "With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it. "

      Really? I don't have a television. I don't read magazines.

      So if I go out and buy a new Mac to replace my wife's old Mac, does that mean that I've "bought into" the image and hype?

      Gee, I thought I was just buying a computer. Silly me.

    122. Re:Meh. by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      You're not just buying the thing being offered in many cases though. With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it.

      Well that matters a fair bit to some people, especially for people who aren't tech savy. There is also the anti-image crowd who would rather avoid what they want, just to avoid appearing that they were another sheep. For me, I don't really care whether I am considered a sheep, as long as I got the device for the reasons that mattered to me.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    123. Re:Meh. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      I gotta reply to this too. I think you can get the next day stuff from Dell but you have to buy their premium support and then the $200 difference the parent was mentioning probably vanishes.

    124. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its gotta be better, I mean, you would pay $1, 000 extra for the Apple Smug(tm) feeling, and a shiny aluminum case, right?

      No, you wouldn't? Oh, well.
      I guess some people haven't learned the usefullness of a good size helping of smugness and undeserved self-importance.

    125. Re:Meh. by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      I don't believe in carrying spare wiring. There's no need, when you know how to make a wire out of everyday items like a creamer pouch or the spring from a ball point pen. *starts humming MacGyver theme*

    126. Re:Meh. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>(trying to get win 98 games running in XP or Vista is a _nightmare_)

      This is interesting. I'm trying to get the MS-DOS-era Wing Commander to work in Win98 (laptop) and WinXP (desktop), and it refuses to work in either. I wonder if it would work any better with Wine on my Ubuntu Linux laptop?

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    127. Re:Meh. by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      I've purchased more than one mac from their refurb section. They are not only inspected, they are cleaned up and repackaged with all the clear protective films and such just like a brand new one. The only thing you don't get is the spiffy box and nifty foam inserts, instead you get plain brown cardboard and low rent foam. Oh no.

      Got a maxed out black macbook the day after the Al ones debuted, for $1100.

    128. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..with Apple, if your shit's broke, they send you a box next day air, you put your laptop in and and ship it back next day air with the label they give you, and then you usually get it back within 3 days, no charge if you're still under warranty.

      To be fair, I had a similar experience with a laptop from HP. I haven't compared prices between HP and apple though.

    129. Re:Meh. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Plus a windows install that is only used to play games and nothing else, will get less bogged down with crap and thus run your games better...

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    130. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1, Redundant

      I used to work as a repair tech for both companies.

      YES, I CAN.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    131. Re:Meh. by elfprince13 · · Score: 1

      Most of the Windows users I know use Windows because its comes with the computer. Gamers are a small minority. I started out with "educational games" on our first machine (I was too young to remember the model number), then when we upgraded to a Performa 6400 I began using it for writing, and programming Java with Codewarrior. With the iMac G3 came web browsing, email, more programming and my first foray into the terminal. The G3 served as the primary computer until last summer when the hard drive began acting up and was relegated to a print server for our Personal LaserWriter 320. I bought a Macbook Pro and setup an old Dell with Xubuntu for Mom to check her email and listen to internet radio with.

    132. Re:Meh. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      If it locks up due to overheating and your not running it in an environment outside of the machine's published operating environment, then it's defective and should be returned to apple for repair or replacement.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    133. Re:Meh. by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      As I recall, WinME introduced System Restore... which was so buggy that you had to disable it to keep the system even remotely stable.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    134. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Naturally it weighs more. 13" laptop versus a 17" laptop - that is A GIVEN. I'm comparing hardware features for the price, not mass for the money like an airline would. Let's not change the focus.

      For that $40 bucks I don't have to download software, I just point the BIOS to boot from USB first. That's ease of use, worth paying for.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    135. Re:Meh. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>I am quite happy to pay the apple tax (which doesnt exist)

      It annoys me when people say the Apple tax doesn't exist. I like Macs better than Pieces-of-Crap (PCs) but I still acknowledge that you cannot buy a Mac for $300 like you can with PCs. Even a better PC with the latest i7 CPU can be bought for only $1100 - you cannot do that with a Mac.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    136. Re:Meh. by digitig · · Score: 1

      In 18 months Moore's Law will kick in anyway.

      Who cares? If the laptop is doing its job I don't plan to upgrade. I don't need state-of-the-art to do any of my work, and I don't needs state-of-the-art for my personal laptop. Word processing, presentations and Eclipse work fine on an old laptop -- as long as it isn't falling apart. (Anything that needs high spec -- which to be honest is just games for me -- I run on a desktop computer).

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    137. Re:Meh. by phoenix.bam! · · Score: 1

      Ipods have not made you party of the trendy crowd for years. Ipods are nearing market saturation. At this point it is trendier to not own an Ipod.

    138. Re:Meh. by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Not only that, it's a string raise.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    139. Re:Meh. by dougisfunny · · Score: 1

      But then you don't get the wonderful experience of only having one mouse button.....

      --
      This is not the funny you're looking for.
    140. Re:Meh. by MrPhilby · · Score: 1

      Autocad, Activesync for pda's (missing link won't sync email and the iphone doesn't have a decent handwritten notes app like phatnotes) nasty sharp edge on front of all keyboards on laptops, flaky bluetooth due to poorly routed cable. That's why I took mine back.

    141. Re:Meh. by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I just switched over to mac this past December, and I will say that for the first time in a long time, I found myself buying smaller twenty dollar applications that have I needed in my work flow. So in some way, my cost of ownership has risen.

      I guess that depends on whether each of those $20 applications save you more than $20 over the lifetime of their use. Even if only in time saved-- ask yourself how much time each of those will save you over the whole time you own them, and then ask yourself what the dollar rate is at which you value your own time.

      Anyway, yes, it's true that Apple has a pretty good developer community right now. I remember a long time ago, there used to be tons and tons of little $20 shareware apps for Windows, but it seems like a lot of that has either died off or turned to FOSS. For whatever reason, that market is still going strong on OSX.

    142. Re:Meh. by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac? What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

      Well, as a devloper of Windows software, my Windows development machine lets me get things done. Other examples off the top of my head for Windows:

      1. Games
      2. Internet Explorer (Used only for some e-commerce sites that require it)
      3. COM architecture to allow interprocess communication
      4. Menus are inside windows, not at the top of the screen
      5. Right-click button on the touchpad
      6. Cheaper than OS X
      7. Finally, stability. Windows needs it's weekly reboots or it slows down. OS X can go for a while and then FUBAR everything up.
      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    143. Re:Meh. by earlymon · · Score: 1

      Your point is well made and taken. That being said....

      But if Microsoft want to point out they are lower cost that competitors, what's wrong with that?

      It's not even wrong.

      I cannot buy a Microsoft computer, not mini, not laptop, not desktop. I cannot buy an Apple OS and install it on a third party computer (true if I constrain myself to the EULA).

      If it is true that Linux is a Microsoft Windows competitor, Microsoft could never point out that they are lower cost. We can lament that Linux prepackaged on a Dell is more expensive than Windows prepackaged on a Dell - but that's not what I said. I can download Linux for free - I cannot do the same for Windows.

      I can buy Microsoft Office for Windows or OS X. I can get Open Office for free.

      So again - the quoted statement is not even wrong.

      And although I think that my nit picking is valid, it is not a rebuttal, nor should it be.

      Here is my rebuttal: if the issue is about what platform is best, as you say, then price has little - if anything - to do with it.

      The decision over which platform is best is not subjective - it is however personal. I (that's the rhetorical as well as the literal "I") have my personal criteria based upon my personal needs that leads to my personal choice of the platform best for me - not a range of bests, not a choice of bests - a best.

      The best platform for me (you) will self-define its own cost - the cost components will be hardware, software and my (your) time.

      Once I (you) have made that assessment, the only decisions left are: 1) is it within my budget? and 2) if so, shall I purchase it?

      If those criteria are met, I (you) make the purchase. If not, I (you) seek price-driven alternatives to the (personal) best.

      All that marketing and peer pressure can do is to influence my awareness of choices when selecting my (your) personal best.

      Sometimes, my personal best has been a system based on OS2 Warp. Sometimes, DOS. Sometimes, CP/M. Sometimes, AppleDOS. Sometimes, Windows. Sometimes, OS X. Sometimes, DESQviewX. Sometimes, BSD. Sometimes, HP-UX. Sometimes, Linux. Sometimes, FreeBSD. I have purchased all of the above in my time.

      My decision for best has never been - and could never be - influenced by cost. But when I've had to choose next-best due to budget, then and only then has cost been the factor.

      I submit that I have just proven the senselessness of pretending to be able to establish that any system is best, per se - in direct refutation of your point.

      (And for the last time - this is way NOT directed at you, mdwh2 - could we PLEASE dispense with the "OS X users are lame because they are stupidly buying image" comments? That image-stupidity exists is a known constant, and no one vendor has cornered that market - and never will.)

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    144. Re:Meh. by keithpreston · · Score: 1

      Exactly, Apple doesn't have a "Tax". They choose to only sell high-end hardware, mostly because it is a niche market and high margin. By choosing Apple you are choosing a different class of product. This high end niche market also means that is where all the profit is. I don't think Apple wants to joins the ranks of Dell and HP selling PC at a 1-2% gross margin. They are perfectly fine making a 30% with their premium lines while preserving their "brand" value.

    145. Re:Meh. by PIBM · · Score: 1

      Humm :) They might just want a new shiny toy ;)

      For the P166, I was working along with my father on automatizing a production facility, and I was programming the machinery with my computer. For real time debugging, I needed faster than the older 100mhz ..

      For the P3-500, I was providing web services for some analysis tools I had developped, and the 166mhz wasn't fast enough.

      The athlon came when I was doing realtime image capture & analysis, I had built a system which we could control only with gestures, and the p3-500 wasn't fast enough.

      The core 2 duo was for a system I built to detect damage on a 3D surface from laser scanning matched with a grayscale picture (reflection analysis), for which we had to display the full result in realtime for an easy comprehension by the people reviewing the data.

      Anyway, I guess that the real needs of people might be the cause for some of us, but that's most probably not the general case :)

      I also know people who are buying a new mac on every apple refresh :)

    146. Re:Meh. by gander666 · · Score: 1

      We pay the premium (lazy turds in our IT support group), and the service still sucks.

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    147. Re:Meh. by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      Mouse - I can turn mine off with the touch of a button if I want to attach a real mouse. Not really much of a 'feature' but handy for gaming.

      Actually, that's a feature of OS X, hence Apple doesn't add a physical button for it. System Preferences allows you to set up the touchpad to be deactivated if an external mouse is connected.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    148. Re:Meh. by wickerprints · · Score: 1

      Maybe that's true for other people but I personally feel that my choice of hardware is driven by my particular needs in terms of functionality, usability, and lastly, aesthetics. I would like to think that I don't buy things just because other people have them. I mean, what kind of purpose does that serve? Status is not important to me--I don't wear the trendiest clothes, or drive the fanciest car. I'm extremely price-conscious when it comes to things that are unimportant to me. But I am willing to pay for quality when that quality counts. I've been burned too often by Windows and bargain-basement PC hardware.

      So I've never owned an iPod, but when the iPhone came out I did buy one, because it was clear that it was a significant innovation that combined multiple functions into a single, cohesive, well-designed device. I didn't get it because it was "cool." The thing is, advertising and PR is ubiquitous. It's not fair to say that marketing drives the purchasing decisions of the consumer when it comes to Apple products, but the same does not equally apply to Microsoft, HP, Dell, Nokia, or whatever.

      People like to attribute Apple's success to their marketing, their attention to aesthetics. And I don't doubt there's some contribution. I don't doubt for a moment that a lot of people buy their products because they see their friends with these sleek, shiny devices. But in my view, that's a bit upside-down. Nobody would buy the hardware if it didn't live up to its promises.

    149. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wow a thermal paste issue from y2k.

    150. Re:Meh. by sgtrock · · Score: 1

      I'm glad that Apple's UI fits the way that you work. However, stating that

      "...it combines a UI on par with or better than Windows with the 'Unix like' functionality offered by Linux"

      assumes that you see the the OS/X UI as far better than that of any Linux UI.

      That is not necessarily a universal truth. I have access to Macs, Linux, and XP boxes here at work and at home. Of the three, I would far rather use KDE or fluxbox than either XP or OS/X. Therefore, for me, Linux is my OS of choice.

    151. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing out on accidental damage coverage, which apple does not offer.

      Dell offers accidental damage coverage, to the point of covering liquid spills, dropping, and i've even had them replace a laptop that had a car run over it.

      Another flip-side to Apple's coverage, is should the computer be damaged in an accident, then they will charge you to replace anything that they feel is 'wrong' with the computer. Including a scratched/minor dented case. I've sent off MBP's to apple that need a superdrive replaced due to being dropped, and ended up with a $1,500 bill.

    152. Re:Meh. by Draek · · Score: 1

      Really the question I have is why would anybody NOT buy a mac? What benefit do Windows or Linux offer (for a user/developer machine!!! (not server))?

      For desktops, the ability to build your own since that means you can get a more powerful machine for cheaper, *and* easily replace any component you don't like. For notebooks, Thinkpads > Macbooks though Macbooks > everything else, so if Lenovo ever drops the ball my next laptop will probably be an Apple.

      Plus, there's the fact that for Linux OS upgrades are free which encourages you to stay up-to-date. Add the fact that the OS is so well integrated with all kinds of dev tools, which means I can pick one text editor, one graphical toolkit and one programming language at random and they'll almost surely work together with no hassles, and you have the perfect dev machine. Also, I may be alone in this but I *despise* the Mac GUI, it has gotten better since the Classic days, sure, but even Win95 was better than that turd so that ain't saying much.

      Granted, there are many reasons to like Macs and specifically OSX, but there are plenty to like both Windows and Linux as well, and plenty to dislike each and every one of them, so this is just to tell you why *I* choose to run Linux and have my Mac happily collecting dust in a corner. YMMV and all that.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    153. Re:Meh. by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      By all accounts I've heard WinME was worse than Win98SE. Same limitations, less support for DOS software, lesser stability. So why release it in the first place? I think going straight from Win98SE to XP would have been better for Microsoft's reputation.

      At the same time, Microsoft already had Windows 2000. The geeks in my circle of friends usually skipped WinME and went straight to Windows 2000, which was a much better system. All it lacked was a "home" version so Microsoft could sell a cheap version to the home user without cannibalizing the sales of the "professional" version.

      For several years afterwards, Windows 2000 was just as good as XP in terms of stability and application support. Only in the last few years, Windows 2000 suffers increasingly from lack of driver support and maybe subtle incompatibilities to XP (which everyone is developing for).

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    154. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      That's just because MY cigarettes are less harmful to the environment than YOUR SUVs.

      Some people need SUV's. No one needs to smoke. And people don't routinely leave their SUV's running on sidewalks, in bars, or at concerts/sporting events so other people are forced to breath in the toxic fumes from the SUV's exhaust.

      And MY gun kills fewer people than the greaseballs YOU are sucking down.

      Almost the same as the above: everyone needs food, but very, very, very few people actually need a gun. Guns are like how one of my friends talks about expensive electronics: what does need have to do with it.

    155. Re:Meh. by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Unless they've recently changed their policy you have to pay shit loads more to get them to come out to your house.

    156. Re:Meh. by snowwrestler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about sleep and wake reliably when I close and open the lid. This is reason #1 why my portable computer is a Mac.

      Reason #2 is that OS X is the only OS on which I can run Photoshop, Dreamweaver, and a Unix shell.

      --
      Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    157. Re:Meh. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      I think that's why I built the last few boxes that are here, but sucks in what way?

      1.) Time on hold?
      2.) Nota speka gooda egliz?
      3.) Telling you a hardware problem is software and not their responsibility?
      ???

      I never did pay for extra support or even call them for that matter. I just bought the cheap stuff and fixed what breaks. That's easy, it's just a commodity PC. With Apple you really would need the support but if Dell sells you extra support, then they should provide it. Maybe they have a Diamond Protection Plan now.

      I am old enough to remember when Dell and some of the other companies had real good support. They would send a tech down here just to change a floppy drive next day. Now maybe with the economy going down companies that succeed will finally realize that their customers are their most valuable assets.

      If I was a home user I would want a Mac (What's $200 for a better product). If I were in small business it would still be Microsoft (They have small businesses by the balls and wont let go). If I were in a mid size or larger company, I would go with Linux (Because I could afford to hire a programmer to fill in the small gaps).

    158. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      That is not necessarily a universal truth.

      But a qualitative one is that with Apple's User Interface Guidelines, applications have more consistent interfaces than with KDE or Gnome.

    159. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Because -1, Bloviation isn't an option.

    160. Re:Meh. by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?

      Most of 'em.

      The thing about Apple stuff is that it really actually is pretty damn good stuff, in addition to being cool. The click-wheel iPod's interface was glorious. The iPhone is a dream to use. My MacBook is the only laptop I've ever had that I didn't want to throw through a window (light, small, speedy, mag-safe strip, can handle sleep/hibernate properly, love the OS, well constructed, featureful). I don't think a lot of people buy that stuff because it's cool - I think most buy the aforementioned products because they like the way they work more than anything.

      The only thing that Apple does that I think fits the "bought because it's cool" is the shuffle. I have one (got it as a gift) and I suppose it's cute, but there are better tiny players out there for less. By "better" I mean as solid an interface (or better, with a display), good battery life, easy to load up, good sound quality, etc. The only time I use it is if I'm visiting my aunt who gave it to me and we go for a jog together. I think shuffles are kind of like Coach keychains - a cheap bit of "style" people can have - and are definitely for trendwhores.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    161. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      screw image, the controls on an iPod feel right. Simple interface and it does what its supposed to, it can even be used as an emergency startup disk if need be. Try that with another MP3 player. Its not image I pay for, but multiple uses and functionality.

    162. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 1
      You've still failed to do anything other than repeat a sales pamphlet.

      1) good build quality (aluminum case, bright LED, etc)
      2) Unix system w/ very solid UI
      3) retain ability to run Windows/play games.

      1. I have had two HP laptops (one for 3 or so years now and the other recently as a gift) and their build quality seems pretty good to me. I even took apart the older one to dust it and I didn't notice anything substandard about the components that went into it. The older one has survived some wear and tear from being in a travel bag slung about as I explore a wildlife refuge too, so it's obviously more than sturdy for my use.

      2. This is an honest question, but what advantages would I get over using OS X compared to what I am already using? I do perl, C, C++ and play with a handful of other languages, is there something OS X offers me over Ubuntu here?

      3. I can already play these games without paying extra on said desktop (which used to dual boot).

      The only thing you're really telling me is that you think the OS X GUI is nice. I admit it is pretty, but what justification do I have to relearn an OS's UI if I already have working environments? If I'm going to spend an extra $1000 or so on pretty, I'm just going to get tattoos, but then, like your statements above, this is just my preference.

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    163. Re:Meh. by prelelat · · Score: 1

      Here's the thing, I have nothing against OSX or apples desktop systems but I'll tell you one thing that pisses me right off about their laptops that makes me never want to buy one. the freaking mouse buttons. Yes I know the touchpad is all spiffy with the two finger pressing and all that jazz but I hate it. I hate that it, if they can put a freaking click they can put a right click and a left click. How stupid do they think I am that I can't operate two freaking buttons on a mouse.

      My wife has a Mac book and I must say that OSx is pretty spiffy but it also has the same short commings that Linux does Vs. windows. The software, it's pretty hard to justify switching to a Mac when you primarly use windows for work. There are certainly comparible apps for what I do on both systems but it's way easier and a lot less pain to work in the same suite all the time. Now you might say "hey you do know we can dual boot now right" well what ever i'm not spending the money on a higher priced MAC.

      By higher priced I mean I can spend 500 dollars on a cheap laptop to meet my needs while the specs aren't great it does the job perfectly. Now when you compare a MAC to a non MAC intel computer of the same spec you're getting relativly the same stuff at a simular price, I've looked I know. but I don't think you can get a brand new macbook for 500 dollars. If I was going for a high end machine for home use next time I go to get a computer I might consider it as I don't do work on my home machine(outside of my hobby projects), I have an Xbox for gaming and I need it to be a higher end machine, so why not(but I still won't get a mac book).

      But those are some reasons on why someone wouldn't sperm over themselves to get one.

      Recap:
      1)software
      2)shitty mouse on the macbook
      3)no low end model(not everyone can aford or needs a $1000+ computer)

    164. Re:Meh. by xX5h1ll3l46hXx · · Score: 0

      The ability to customize Linux allows you to pretty much completely clone the UI from OSX, and saves you money even if it does take some tinkering time to get set up.

    165. Re:Meh. by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      In my experience, that laptop will stay kicking for at least the full 3 years that you can buy your full service warranty at (it's worth the extra cost for that by the way). I had one of the second generation (white) iBooks, and when i sold it after 3 years of hard abuse (I ripped a lot of DVDs), the only thing that had been broken on it was the hard drive. I had a PowerBook G4 that had the display backlight burn out after a year (fixed no questions asked in 3 days, plus they replaced the rubber feet cause they had been beaten up by my a bit). It was still going strong 2.5 years later when I had to return it to an employer I was leaving. My wife still has hers that she bought around the same time, and it has never had any problems. I am sure there are plenty of people who have had bad experiences. It happens. But from my experience, they build a solid machine. Whether or not it's worth the extra price is up to you.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    166. Re:Meh. by JonJ · · Score: 1

      I've worked as an HP, Acer. IBM and Apple tech. Please link me to an HP with the exact same hardware as a Macbook with the same quality software that is so much cheaper.

      --
      -- Linux user #369862
    167. Re:Meh. by xX5h1ll3l46hXx · · Score: 0

      I feel the same way about Toughbooks, well not the sleek and stylish part, but pretty much the perfect system for my needs aside from the Vista that comes on them. I'll save for one of those, even if they are a bit more than a mac, then install Debian on it and get my Windows refund.

    168. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also keep in mind that with Apple, if your shit's broke, they send you a box next day air, you put your laptop in and and ship it back next day air with the label they give you, and then you usually get it back within 3 days, no charge if you're still under warranty. That's pretty hardcore service compared to the on-site service I've had from Dell.

      Forgive me if I'm not reading correctly between the lines here, but how is the Apple method better?

    169. Re:Meh. by saintlupus · · Score: 1

      I'm using XP now, and, honestly, its not that bad. The only thing I really miss is iMovie.

      I just bought one of the refreshed Minis, solely for use as an iMovie/iDVD appliance. I do all of my real work on a Debian box, but for handling media, Apple blows everyone else away.

      --saint

    170. Re:Meh. by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      yea, I've gotten several dos games to run under wine. of course, your other option is dosbox...have you tried that?

    171. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the Apple of the 90s would've been a dream for you ... LC, Performa, Centris, Quadra, Power Mac. There were dozens upon dozens of models, sometimes there would even be three machines that were the exact same hardware (the model number just indicated who sold the machine (Apple/Sears/etc) and what software bundle it came with.)

      However this often led to machines that were deliberately crippled so as not to cut into another product line. Why buy Macintosh X when you could spend a little less on Macintosh Y that gave reasonably comparable performance? And I can't imagine supporting all those different models (some existing mere months) was a picnic either.

      Apple simplified, made product lines with clear, defined divisions. No longer are you presented with a half dozen machines, each marginally different than the other (unless you want to nit-pick about processor speed and iMac screen size.)

    172. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Why should I buy a Mac instead of buying a PC and dual-booting with Linux? The $600 extra cost attached to MacBook Pros (when compared to approximately equivalent Dell laptops) carries a lot more weight than GUI polish, in my book.

      Did I say $600? Yes, that's what I've seen historically, but I just configured a Dell Inspiron 15 with approximately the same specs as the base MacBook Pro, and the Inspiron 15 is $1070 cheaper. (The Inspiron 15 has a slightly lower screen resolution, but a bigger hard drive.)

      So... can you explain how, exactly, Apple's "more polished experience" is worth $1070?

    173. Re:Meh. by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      You need an SUV? For what? Usually I can recommend a more economic vehicle, depending on your needs. And let me not start about people keeping their SUVs running and filling the sidewalks with fumes in a traffic jam so they can sit in an air conditioned environment.

      Also, please explain to me why you need the burger greaseballs when there is much more healthy and about as expensive food available.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    174. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Done! See this post here as I do a direct comparison of my $999 17" HP DV9825 versus the $999 13" Macbook - here you go

      And that's WITHOUT software packages.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    175. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I think anyone with a brain & who can afford it, will buy Apple - even if you want to wipe it to install Ubuntu. The rest of you either need to save more to get a real system, or will have to settle for substandard windows systems running MS Vista :P

      I didn't have an argument with your comment until I got to this bit at the end... why would anyone in their right mind buy a Mac just to delete OSX and install Ubuntu? That's like flushing money down the toilet. It's far more cost-effective to custom-build a desktop and install Linux on that.

      And are you trying to imply that decent non-Mac desktops cost more than Apple's machines? I challenge you to show me a single instance where it's cheaper to buy a Mac desktop from Apple than to build an equivalent desktop from parts and install Linux on it.

      You see, I don't have to settle for substandard anything by not buying Apple - and my wallet stays heavier than yours. Put another way, if I were to spend as much on a desktop as you would spend on an iMac or Mac Pro, I'd have a much better machine...

    176. Re:Meh. by boxlight · · Score: 2, Informative

      Me too. I bought a MacBook after Christmas, and since then I bought CSSEdit, Espresso, the recent MacHeist3 bundle, iWork, and I'm that close to buying OmniGraffle (except that one's a little too expensive and I'm getting by fine with the free eval version).

      I can't remember the last time I actually *bought* software for my old Windows machine.

      Mac OS X gets lots of press, but the people who build these great little software apps for Mac should get more praise.

    177. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, apparently this guy feels special because he buys Apple products

    178. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Naturally it weighs more. 13" laptop versus a 17" laptop - that is A GIVEN. I'm comparing hardware features for the price, not mass for the money like an airline would. Let's not change the focus.

      So you want us to ignore the gaping holes in your storyline and your comparisons? Sure, how much are you paying?

    179. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I must quibble with your last claim. You see, in order to develop for Linux, one merely needs to have possession of any generic PC. In order to develop for OSX, one must have possession of a Mac.

      As has been pointed out by myself and others many times, Macs are more expensive than PCs. Therefore, it is easier to develop for Linux than for OSX for a few reasons:

      - The required hardware is cheaper.
      - Apple's OSX SDK's license is not, as far as I am aware, compatible with some of the various standard OSS licenses. Feel free to correct me on this.
      - Though Apple's SDK is available for free, not all components of OSX are open source, and therefore it is possible - or dare I say likely - that some things would not be as easy to develop for OSX as they are for Linux.

      I guess I must quibble with your first claim as well. Do you not consider a 100% markup to be "extremely overpriced"? I've shown elsewhere that, as of the time of this writing, a Dell Inspiron 15 equivalent to a baseline MacBook Pro is $1070 cheaper - the MacBook Pro costs $1999. The Dell is over 50% cheaper!

      (Before someone starts telling me about hardware durability, I'm not sure I can agree there either - a friend of mine used to work in an Apple repair shop. They break just as easily as any other machine. Anecdotal evidence, YMMV, etc.)

    180. Re:Meh. by boxlight · · Score: 1
      "A re-buy of Office for Mac starts at $150"

      For my old Windows machine I spent $200 on the Windows home version Office (2002, I think?) because my wife insisted on having Excel (for basic household budgeting).

      When I bought my Mac, I tried the pre-installed eval version of iWork '09 and got my wife to play with the Numbers spreadsheet and we have not looked back.

      iWork makes Office look *decidedly* dated in most respects. And iWork '09 only costs $79.

    181. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Overheating

      Lots of laptops get hot. Get something to sit it on.

      creaky laptop casings

      Are you still holding the bad 5300 batteries against them too? No OEM has a flawless quality record.

      the annoyance of iTunes

      Delete it then.

    182. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest problem with PC durability is that people treat their laptops like textbooks. If people would stop throwing their computers around, they would last years just fine. People complain especially about Dell being lower quality cases, but my Dell laptop has lasted the last two years without any issues (I guess recently Windows bluescreens at random, but Linux runs just fine).

      In high school, I myself was guilty of treating my old laptop like a textbook - but that was a Thinkpad, and back then, Thinkpads were built like tanks. It finally died of old age after 8 years of faithful service.

      Stop throwing computers around, and they'll stop breaking. That's what I always tell people, but do they listen? ... I'll let you guess the answer to that.

    183. Re:Meh. by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

      You can drill with a handdrill and a powerdrill. If you're cheap, you get the handdrill. The rest of us get a powerdrill and spend less time on drilling. :)

      --

      Stop the brainwash

    184. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      It annoys me when people conflate limited product options with a "tax". If you want a $300 laptop, go ahead and buy a $300 laptop - no skin off your nose or Apple's.

    185. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Apple, but Dell's educational discount was significantly less than their Small Business discount. I saved ~$200 more and got a wider selection by buying through their Small Business site instead of their Educational site.

      Anyone know if Apple is similar?

    186. Re:Meh. by digitig · · Score: 1

      I have a 16-year-old and an 18-year-old using the laptops in this house. Are they likely to listen? I'll let you guess the answer to that.

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    187. Re:Meh. by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      Because the on-site service I've had from Dell was spotty at best. The service I've had from Apple has been flawless.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    188. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I absolutely second that.

      My Macbook is the best laptop I ever had and I was fixing them for a living for a very long time.

    189. Re:Meh. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I cannot buy a Microsoft computer, not mini, not laptop, not desktop.

      No one claims this - I was just being brief with my wording because I assumed people would get the meaning, but let me spell it out: Microsoft point out that buying a PC with Windows is cheaper than buying a Mac.

      I cannot buy an Apple OS and install it on a third party computer (true if I constrain myself to the EULA).

      Which is exactly the point that Microsoft are making.

      If it is true that Linux is a Microsoft Windows competitor, Microsoft could never point out that they are lower cost. We can lament that Linux prepackaged on a Dell is more expensive than Windows prepackaged on a Dell - but that's not what I said. I can download Linux for free - I cannot do the same for Windows.

      Sure, Linux is even cheaper. If someone wants to run Linux ads pointing this out, good luck to them. I wouldn't expect Microsoft too, though. Their adverts are targetting at mainstream users, where Linux is minimal competition. The choice for these people is "PCs being sold in a shop" which tends to be PCs running Windows, and a couple of Macs. Their adverts are targetted against Mac users, so the benefits of Linux, BSD, BeOS or whatever else aren't a concern.

      Sometimes, my personal best has been a system based on OS2 Warp. Sometimes, DOS. Sometimes, CP/M. Sometimes, AppleDOS. Sometimes, Windows. Sometimes, OS X. Sometimes, DESQviewX. Sometimes, BSD. Sometimes, HP-UX. Sometimes, Linux. Sometimes, FreeBSD. I have purchased all of the above in my time.

      Well sure, but I wouldn't expect Microsoft to spend money on advertising against most of these, as they're not much in the way of competition.

    190. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This used to be a huge problem, then Apple switched to Intel and you can load Windows via Bootcamp for gaming. I had friends get the 512MB video card option on their MBP's just so they could play the latest games.

      My opinion of Bootcamp

    191. Re:Meh. by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Can you build your own laptop? I am not in IT, and building my own wouldn't be an option. I travel, hence the Latitude. I used to use my own Mac laptop, but that got nixed buy the powers that be. Geoff

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    192. Re:Meh. by Khyber · · Score: 1

      As you fail to read my other comments which line up my $999 HP laptop vs the $999 White Macbook.

      Go read and come back when you can not be a coward, yes?

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    193. Re:Meh. by earlymon · · Score: 1

      Microsoft point out that buying a PC with Windows is cheaper than buying a Mac

      I think the idea is supposed to be that a PC with Windows is cheaper than buying a Mac, provided that each system has exactly the same hardware features and hardware quality.

      If that's how you read that, I can only claim that over the past few years I've seen many, many cogent posts on /. supporting both sides of the issue.

      My point is only this: whether one or the other is cheaper, or not and they're both the same - so what? I contend that it's a common phrase, "I want the best computer for the money" but that if we dig deeper, we find the phrase has no meaning. Lots of emotion, emotion is a component of some purchases, but again - no meaning.

      This statement DOES have meaning: "I want the best computer for my personal needs and I want it to be within my budget."

      The two statements are not identical. When I buy a Windows PC, I do not compare after the fact (or during the purchase) to an Apple price - it's a waste of time. During the purchase event, Apple is not on the radar, it doesn't fit my needs for that purchase. When I buy a Mac, I similarly do not look at PC prices, for exactly the same reason.

      The statement about PC vs. Mac price advantage is successfully masquerading as some sort of relevant fact. It is not.

      It is a VERY relevant emotional tool to push the buyer into an action he was going to take anyway - buy a PC. It is no different that Apple pushing the relevant emotional tool of cool to push the buyer into an action he was going to take anyway - buy a Mac.

      I don't begrudge Apple their coolness sales tool, neither do I begrudge Microsoft their pricing sales tool. I simply and very vehemently object to either masquerading as a relevant fact when they are both nothing more that Madison Avenue, emotional slickery.

      I will grant that many people buy on emotion and then use some "fact" to hide it. I wish everyone bought sensibly, like me - get the right tool for the job and get a dog to love and be loved instead of getting emotional satisfaction from a toaster (my name for all computers, pre-BSG). Why do I want this? So Apple wins? Because it proves something? Because it's just righteous? Because I'm smarter or more correct?

      No.

      I want this so my idiot friends will stop wasting my valuable time whenever then need to buy a toaster. I am sick of being asked if I'm ok if they buy a PC and is it as good as a Mac because they last saw me using a Mac. I am sick of being asked if they are being idiots for considering a Mac because they last saw me using a PC. I am sick of being argued with by them, which they will do no matter whether I give them advice or not. I want that to all go away. I do not believe that I am alone in this utopian dream.

      I am sick of everyone's marketing because it is hiding a simple fact - no one sells a computer to the masses by filling out a simple configuration form - Do you edit documents? Do you play games? Do you do digital photography? Etc? And then spits out the "We STRONGLY recommend this computer at this price for your configured needs." No one does that. And - the storefront retailers used to do that - back in the day!!!!

      Now, both sides make the user select kB, MB, GB, RAM, HD, etc, etc, and BOTH sides congratulate the victim for being so smart and also cool for being so smart.

      I don't care who is claiming to be emperor - he has no clothes.

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
    194. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The $600 extra cost attached to MacBook Pros (when compared to approximately equivalent Dell laptops)

      "Equivalent", eh? Like this guy who compares a $1600 Dell to a $2800 MPB, without mentioning that the Dell is literally twice the size of the MPB, has an older processor, a weaker battery and has a slower system bus with DDR2 compared to DDR3 for the MBP?

    195. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Backbook Pro plays WoW at excellent framerate. What other games do you need?

    196. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You need an SUV?

      Never said I do. But farmers/construction firms/people who live in areas with harsh winters do need SUV's. Which is not to say that lots of people need SUV's - the urban Cowboy who has never taken his F-150 outside of Houston can go screw himself.

      Also, please explain to me why you need the burger greaseballs when there is much more healthy and about as expensive food available.

      I don't need to have a burger anymore than I need to have a salad for lunch. However, it is perfectly possible to balance out the burger with other healthy foods like salads and regular exercise. There is no way to balance out a pack of cigarettes.

    197. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a highly unknown thing with macs. But very good advice non the less, I always buy refurbs, very good quality at pretty much apple-tax-less rates.

      -$500~ or so for not getting a shiny black box (yours will be white) and you miss out on getting to choose the gloss on the screen sometimes.

      Also, I'll point out if what your after isn't there, check back in a day or two (frequent updates), also check other country sites they might have stock your country does not.

      Warranties etc are all the same as buying new.

    198. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, if you want to buy a returned, refurbished, PC you can do it too. The cheapest refurb Dell Inspiron is $350 (actually, they have "dented" ones for like $325.)..cheapest refurb Mac? $850.

                You WILL save but even a *refurbed* Mac is not really price-competitive at the lower end.

    199. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      No, not quite like that guy.

      When I do price comparisons, I make the specs as close as possible, and where they are different, I point out what those differences are. For example, in my previous post I mentioned that the Inspiron 15 has a slightly lower screen resolution, but a bigger hard drive. If memory serves, everything else was the same, but I'm not sure if I checked the RAM speeds.

      In other words, I'm as fair as I can be when I do price comparisons ;) Unlike most people who do Mac vs PC price comparisons, I don't have a particular view I want to support - I don't like Apple's marketing practices, but I don't have anything in particular against Macs or OSX other than their price. If Apple were to lower their prices to a comparable level, I would probably buy an Apple machine. I would accept a $100 higher Mac price as comparable; $600 is far too much.

    200. Re:Meh. by mr+i+want+to+go+home · · Score: 1

      I can't believe what I'm hearing, when people on Slashdot say they prefer Windows AND Linux to OSX. My God. I guess it's the fault of Unbutu, and now any Windows luser can try out Linux and be a leet haxzor!

    201. Re:Meh. by nanoakron · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My friend still uses his 12" PB on a regular basis.

      So much for those 5 upgrades in the meantime...

    202. Re:Meh. by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      And you can get a basic Dell PC with 3GB of memory, a 250GB hard drive, a DVD burner, and an Intel Pentium (Core 2-based) Dual-Core CPU for $500. It's enough for most people's needs.

      $1000 is a "high-end" notebook in my opinion. My ThinkPad T61, complete with discrete NVIDIA graphics, DVD burner, WSXGA+ display (1440x900), 7200rpm HDD, and several other options was under $1000, and that was a year ago.

      You might argue that the MacBook (non-Pro) is competitive with the T400, and you'd be right. There's a bit of a gap (T400 starts at around $700), but it's not so far off.

      Where you run into a problem is at the low-end. You can get a perfectly capable PC for $500, complete with plenty of memory, a big disk, and a decent CPU.

      Not everyone wants to buy a Lexus.

    203. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of the stuff in the report is more blatant nonsense, of course: "A re-buy of Office for Mac starts at $150" (whose fault is that?) -- so Office for the PC is free, is it? Or do they think that all Mac users will buy Office for Windows too, just to keep Microsoft happy?

      But if you had an older PC with MS Office, why wouldn't you take the discs and install Windows and Office in your new Mac, via BootCamp, if you need so?

    204. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is exactly my experience.
      I periodically get pissed off enough at apple to consider going back to Linux (I am not happy with the build quality on the new MBP), but so many things just work out of the box with my Mac (synchronising my iPhone, printer installation, scanner installation etc) that I stay with them.

    205. Re:Meh. by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>buy a $300 laptop - no skin off your nose or Apple's.

      Except there is skin off Apple's nose - first in terms of a lost sale because I chose the cheaper $300 laptop (or $1100 Intel i7 PC) rather than the i7 Macintosh with $1000 markup..... which hurts Apple's bottom line due to the lost sale. Second because it makes them vulnerable to Microsoft's commercials about Apple machines being too pricey, and that too hurts Apple's bottom line.

      To sit there and deny those obvious two facts seems as stupid to me as Californians who deny they live on an earthquake-prone fault. Face reality; don't deny it.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    206. Re:Meh. by L7_ · · Score: 1

      His point stands. The larger laptop is heavier and bulkier.

      This is disregarding the fact that the things that the macbook beats the hp in (processor speed, video card, etc.) you just ignore. Without a conclusion explanation, I am not really certain how you came to determine that your 17" hp has the "exact specs" as the macbook.

      Go the opposite way: look at the $999 macbook and see if you can find a machine that is comparable.

      You won't.

    207. Re:Meh. by babyrat · · Score: 1

      a direct comparison of my $999 17" HP DV9825 versus the $999 13" Macbook

      How is that $700 cheaper?

    208. Re:Meh. by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Reason #2 is that OS X is the only OS on which I can run Photoshop, Dreamweaver, and a Unix shell.

      Photoshop, Dreamweaver and a Unix shell all seem available on Windows.

    209. Re:Meh. by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      If you mean a shell within UNIX, you may be correct, but bash is available for Microsoft Windows.

    210. Re:Meh. by LeonPierre · · Score: 1

      How do those two laptops have "EXACT hardware specs"?

      Does the dv9825ea an LED backlit display? How about:
      MagSafe power port?
      802.11n wireless?
      5 hour battery life?
      Bluetooth?
      Optical Digital Audio Input?
      Optical Digital Audio Output?

      The specs are not even close to identical or exact by any definition or vague interpretation of the word.

      --
      "If it ain't broke, it doesn't have enough features yet"
    211. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the build standard is incredibly good"

      No the build standard looks good. This is not the same thing. I've been desktop support for an apple office for some time. While they nearly always have good design, it is not uncommon to run into annoying engineering issues. It's obvious that in some cases design was given priority over engineering resources. This wouldn't be a problem if they owned up to issues readily, but it's more of a pot luck. Sometimes they'll own up to issues quickly and fix them, other times they'll only fix them after being buried by the weight of independently gathered evidence.

    212. Re:Meh. by iammani · · Score: 1

      So how about how many people they harm/kill? Can you please compare them for me?

    213. Re:Meh. by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 1

      You're not just buying the thing being offered in many cases though. With advertising and PR you're also buying into the image that comes with it.

      I really hate that argument.

      You tell me, how and why would I pay good money to show-off with my freaking laptop or computer, which are both inside my house, not visible to anyone but me, and completely uninteresting to the kind of people who I'd like to impress or 'look cool' to. I'll buy some overpriced fancy clothes or a nice aftershave for that purpose, works much better than 'overpriced' computer hardware.

      I really don't see how anyone in their right mind would fork over any kind of unjustifiable 'Apple tax' because having a Mac makes you feel cool and part of the trendy crowd. It sounds so ridiculous it's actually laughable. I have Macs because I like the form factor, the build quality and most of all: the OS and the way it just works. I like Linux almost equally well and have it running on both my macs. Also, I like how I can sell them 2nd-hand after 3 years, for half the price I paid for them new.

      I don't think iPods are only a success because they are cool either. They typically simply do the job for most people and hence are a safe bet if you want an MP3 player. Sure you can buy MP3 players for 1/4th the price, but there's a lot of crap sold in that price range, which is why a lot of people prefer to spend a few more $$ and be done with it.

    214. Re:Meh. by AlterRNow · · Score: 1

      How exactly was I being pompous or boastful? I was merely stating my opinion on OS X ( which no-one refuted ) and therefore the reasons why I wouldn't buy an Apple machine..

      --
      The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
    215. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems games are a popular justification of late for Windows (IMO in the threads Ive visited)

      It was becoming so much of a common theme, I wrote a whole article on it.

      Im pleased you are having fun with your Tauren Deathknight since WoW is one of the few games I play.

      It confuses me then when you say you run Ubuntu, since its reported by others (and my own experience) that WoW running in Ubuntu through Wine offers a BETTER experience than through Windows. Ive tested it myself with XP/Ubuntu on the same machine. WoW through Wine is smoother with no stability issues.

      Since you already have Ubuntu, you can test it yourself. Going from memory, Ive seen that titles from the COD series also have better performance through Wine. Im sure there are alot more.

      Are games the last bastion of salvation for the Windows platform?
      http://openbytes.wordpress.com/2009/04/16/are-games-the-last-bastion-of-salvation-for-the-windows-platform/

    216. Re:Meh. by somersault · · Score: 1

      MBPs weren't even out until 2006, moron. But yes, this kind of problem seems to have been going on for quite some time.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    217. Re:Meh. by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      And our contention is that buying a Mac and sticking Windows on it will probably not offer those difficulties, but be much easier.

            -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    218. Re:Meh. by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      As others have mentioned, I too compare on more than price. To me the usage experience and the software included is part of the criteria. For example, I used GarageBand (until I "graduated" to Logic) to compose music, and my wife uses iMovie and iDvd to create home videos of our trips. We find that the iLife package included with a new Mac computer is more than appropriate for consumer-grade production of such things. In fact, we actually enjoy using those applications, and find them easy and powerful.

      We also haven't found anything comparable that is just as stable, intuitive and easy to use for Windows. I'm sure there are applications like that, but they do not come in a comprehensive package such as iLife, and they do not come bundled free with a new PC. You are more likely to get a "30 day trial" of some third program, which is not going to be supported by Dell or HP directly.

      For back-ups, we use Time-Machine, and more than once it has saved my skin by allowing me to retrieve an older version of a file. Have you ever seen Time-Machine? It seems almost magical. Instead of having to wade through directories of timestamped archives to figure out what I need from whence, it provides me with a nice and intuitive interface to recover files. For example, I can open the Finder, engage the Time-Machine, and browse my files as they were on various dates. I just move a slider to change the date, and the Finder window automatically shows the state of the file system at that time; I just browse and use it as normal. Sure, it may be more pretty and glitzy than it needs to be, but let me tell you that it makes recovering files a much less painful experience than it typically is. Not only that, but other supported applications (such as Mail, Contacts, etc.) do the same thing: work normally showing you their state during those dates so that you may recover lost or changed items such as e-mail messages or telephone numbers.

      Then there's Automator. Not only do you get a very powerful system scripting language in AppleScript, but a dummy-friendly interface to automate various functions on your system without having to write a single line of code or opening up a command console.

      Then there are little things such as compressed archive support built-in, without requiring additional software installed; generating PDF files from absolutely anything displayed, and even "print-to-PDF" functionality built-in without any Adobe third-party add-on; customizable virtual desktops to organize my work spaces; a dictionary built-in and integrated with the operating system itself, so that it is accessible from any application displaying text.

      There's also a Migration Assistant application--included with the OS--that aids you in importing all your programs and/or settings from a previous installation. I've used this before without any problems whatsoever.

      And let's not forget the comprehensive keyboard-shortcut customization, which allows you to map any combination of keys to just about any menu entry--at the OS or application level--on a centralized panel.

      All these things, in my opinion (and my wife's) offer a better daily usage experience than Windows on a PC, and enhance the value than the mere hardware specifications. We come from a Windows and Linux background, and switched about five years ago. We haven't regretted it ever since.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    219. Re:Meh. by vmbsd · · Score: 1

      You've still failed to do anything other than repeat a sales pamphlet.

      Ah, these are the reasons I prefer to use a Mac w/ Mac OS X instead of Windows/Linux, not a sales pitch.

      1. I have had two HP laptops (one for 3 or so years now and the other recently as a gift) and their build quality seems pretty good to me. I even took apart the older one to dust it and I didn't notice anything substandard about the components that went into it. The older one has survived some wear and tear from being in a travel bag slung about as I explore a wildlife refuge too, so it's obviously more than sturdy for my use.

      Ya, I probably should have chosen a different term. I'm referring to the aesthetics of the laptop as well as the typically good feature set (in addition to the actual build quality).

      For example, I purchased a late 2008 MacBook Pro. This laptop has an all aluminum case, nice glass screen w/ a very bright LED display, it is fairly thin and fairly light, etc. It would be difficult for me to find another laptop that provided this same quality of design and feature set. Really this is a personal preference issue, but I think MacBooks are more appealing in terms of design, etc.

      It also helps to consider that Apple often brings new HW features "to the masses". They were the first to introduce CD-ROM less computers (widespread). The MacBook Air was the "thinest" laptop available (and had SSD). My current MacBook has a nice mini-DVI port (not some huge DVI or DB9 port), the magnetic power cord connector, etc. All in all, it's obvious that they try to drive sales via new, innovative products. In other words, their model is to create new useful things in order to attract new users. I like having new useful things.

      2. This is an honest question, but what advantages would I get over using OS X compared to what I am already using? I do perl, C, C++ and play with a handful of other languages, is there something OS X offers me over Ubuntu here?

      Ah, really, the benefits IMO are that you spend less time dealing with the complex/cobbled together environment, you get a more consistent/better UI and more commercial support for applications. I do a lot of development/learning on NetBSD in X/Fluxbox. I enjoy the simple keyboard based navigation and the old school "hacker" feel of it all BUT it was (and is) a complete and total pain in the ass to setup compared to OS X (it's not that bad really, but definitely more difficult than OS X). I've used other WMs like KDE, Gnome, etc. They're not bad, but they're definitely behind Windows and OS X in terms of consistency across applications, consistency of widgets, quality of applications (the look & feel, usage or feature sets are behind in many ways).

      So really, you get a better user experience (not just eye candy), you have an easier time administering your machine and you have access to more applications (perhaps excluding games) like PhotoShop, Excel, blah blah (if you happen to need to use those things).

      You might say that apps like Open Office, Gimp, etc fill the SW needs, but really, you can run those on Mac OS X too so w/ the Mac you have same options as Linux and more (without the hassle).

      3. I can already play these games without paying extra on said desktop (which used to dual boot).

      Ya, I agree that one disadvantage of the Mac is the inability to play games.

      The only thing you're really telling me is that you think the OS X GUI is nice. I admit it is pretty, but what justification do I have to relearn an OS's UI if I already have working environments? If I'm going to spend an extra $1000 or so on pretty, I'm just going to get tattoos, but then, like your statements above, this is just my preference.

      Ah, I'm saying that the laptop itself is typically nicer and will sometimes include HW features not found elsewhere, that Mac OS X provides a better int

    220. Re:Meh. by Miseph · · Score: 1

      Not quite... I can use Linux and be a total noob. I really just can't stand OSX, and I maintain that it's never any easier to use, and if anything goes even a little bit wrong it is downright impossible.

      --
      Try not to take me more seriously than I take myself.
    221. Re:Meh. by shilly · · Score: 1

      You're ignoring things that you (apparently) don't value but many consumers do: to take just three examples, the white macbook has a latchless clamshell that means there are no fiddly catches which look ugly and are prone to breaking; the powercord is held in place magnetically and thus does not break; the laptop goes immediately and reliably to sleep when the lid is closed and wakes up immediately and reliably when the lid is opened. None of that is true for the HP. There are lots of other similar small but important differences that just make the experience better.

    222. Re:Meh. by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, not a bad point - like I said, if I'd had the cash at the time, I'd probably still be using it.

      I'm just saying that _nowadays_ you'd have to whack me on the head pretty hard to get me to buy a Macbook/Pro. I just don't expect them to last years and years any more.

    223. Re:Meh. by maztuhblastah · · Score: 1

      I felt the same about my MBP at first, but even with the underclocked-as-standard graphics card that comes with it, it gets incredibly noisy when running 3D games, and after a couple of hours it just locks up due to overheating.

      Then call AppleCare. They're very proactive when it comes to replacing machines due to overheating -- if you're getting hard locks due to heat issues that is definitely not par for the MBP course, and if it's under warranty they'll replace it.

      I ended up reading a lot of horror stories about Mac assembly over the last few years, thermal paste being applied too liberally to the CPU etc, so perhaps the machine would run better if I cleaned it out and re-applied the thermal paste myself, but I don't want to have to do that when I've already paid over a thousand pounds for the machine.

      Sigh. The thermal paste thing was an issue... for the first few weeks of the 2006 machines. That's it. If you weren't an early, early adopter, you didn't get bitten by that issue.

      The OSX UI is pretty nice, but Ubuntu is even better once you setup compiz correctly, and Avant Window Manager is a great replacement for the Dock.

      You seem to be laboring under the misapprehension that the only reason to use OS X is the UI. Lest that continue, you might want to consider the following observations from a fellow MBP user: Broadcom WiFi + Linux is painful, suspend/resume isn't quite as reliable as on OS X, dual screen setups on OS X "just work -- on Ubuntu they might work... if you're willing to screw with your xorg.conf, power consumption under Ubuntu can be brought down almost to the level of OS X -- if you're willing to do quite a bit of tuning with powertop, etc.

      Yes, OS X has a pretty UI -- and compiz does too -- but there's a heck of a lot more to it than that. Pretending that Ubuntu's support for the MBP is equivalent to OS X's is just silly.

    224. Re:Meh. by somersault · · Score: 1

      I bought my MBP in January 2007, and yes had I thought that it might just be my machine I would have returned it, but after googling around it seemed to just be a design flaw that I'd have to live with. I guess I'm just not the type to complain, if I think I've made a bad decision I try to make the best of it.

      I was running Ubuntu on the MBP for the last year - WiFi is fine, suspend/resume isn't reliable nope, dual screen was working fine without having to go down to xorg.conf level, the ATi application that comes with their drivers is pretty decent.

      I agree that OSX is better for Mac hardware than Ubuntu, EFI makes hardware configs a pain in the ass. That's why I just bought a Dell with Ubuntu pre-installed this time round, because I could be fairly sure the hardware will be well supported.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    225. Re:Meh. by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      When I do price comparisons, I'm specifically comparing the hardware. This allows me to determine the cost that Apple is assigning to OSX.

      In my above example, they've given OSX a value of $1070. If Microsoft charged $1070 for Windows, there would be an outcry of unparalleled proportions; but because it's Apple doing it, it's totally legit.

      That is what I have a problem with; I don't have any problem with OSX itself.

    226. Re:Meh. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      We'll that's another story depending upon how big your lap is.

      Most of the stuff here doesn't travel, so I guess I have a unique situation. Just telling what I did last time not what I might or might not do next time.

    227. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Because your "opinion" is high on inflammation whilst being free of any qualitative or quantitative analysis.

    228. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      To sit there and deny those obvious two facts seems as stupid to me as Californians who deny they live on an earthquake-prone fault.

      Hey, I saw your picture the other day!

      Except there is skin off Apple's nose - first in terms of a lost sale because I chose the cheaper $300 laptop (or $1100 Intel i7 PC) rather than the i7 Macintosh with $1000 markup.

      You aren't interesting in buying their offerings and they aren't interested in offering what you're looking for: a $300 laptop. It's not any skin off their nose because they are interested in maintaining their (very profitable) business model, not reaching a high marketshare.

    229. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      But the flip side of up-front cost is resale value. A Buick might be cheaper than a Lexus, but the Lexus is going to retain far more of it's value than the Buick.

    230. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hummm... and How that working our for GM vs Audi? (Diverse line vs non-diverse) Maybe it too diverse? Maybe trying to be all things to all people doesn't work? Something to think about at least, no?

    231. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if you actually bought two $300 desktops, then you'd have two pieces of unusable junk instead of just one piece of untinkerable junk.

    232. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also keep in mind that with Apple, if your shit's broke, they send you a box next day air, you put your laptop in and and ship it back next day air with the label they give you, and then you usually get it back within 3 days, no charge if you're still under warranty.

      Only that side of the Atlantic. This side we ahve to put up with no nothing Fanbois shit.

    233. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're far better cooled, and I can buy parts within walking distance of work. I don't see any reason they'd be less likely to work.

    234. Re:Meh. by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      My Linux box runs more/better games than any PC, it's called a PS3. Go to Gamestop and look at the PC section (which looks like a WoW section, but it's really for all PC games) and then look at the PS3 section. Then consider that WoW plays on Mac. Crysis was the last PC-exclusive triple-A title and it was released a couple years ago and it flopped. People always get bad karma for saying this, but it's now official: PC gaming is dead. There are two major players left, Blizzard and Popcap, and they both play on Mac. Buy a PS3, buy a Wii - but don't let Microsoft delude you into believing you must be their slave to game any longer. It's no different than all the fucks who say "I hate Wal-mart and everything they do to the economy, but where else can I grocery shop while I get my tires changed?" Who cares if the answer is nowhere? MAKE SACRIFICES FOR YOUR IDEALS. Disliking Wal-Mart and Microsoft doesn't make you a better person, boycotting them does.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    235. Re:Meh. by AioKits · · Score: 1

      My Linux box runs more/better games than any PC, it's called a PS3. Go to Gamestop and look at the PC section (which looks like a WoW section, but it's really for all PC games) and then look at the PS3 section. Then consider that WoW plays on Mac. Crysis was the last PC-exclusive triple-A title and it was released a couple years ago and it flopped. People always get bad karma for saying this, but it's now official: PC gaming is dead. There are two major players left, Blizzard and Popcap, and they both play on Mac. Buy a PS3, buy a Wii - but don't let Microsoft delude you into believing you must be their slave to game any longer. It's no different than all the fucks who say "I hate Wal-mart and everything they do to the economy, but where else can I grocery shop while I get my tires changed?" Who cares if the answer is nowhere? MAKE SACRIFICES FOR YOUR IDEALS. Disliking Wal-Mart and Microsoft doesn't make you a better person, boycotting them does.

      Thank you for you anecdotal evidence. Your call to Aiokit's is important and a representative will be with you shortly to address your poorly though out over generalization that PC gaming is dead.

      I have a PS3, it sits mostly unused. The machine itself feels bulky and many of the games I can also get on the competing systems. Usually cheaper I've noticed. I didn't get the console (PS3) to serve as a linux/windows/amiga proxy, I got it to play games. Which it does, but not with as great of selection as I had hoped. I have a Wii, it sees as much action as the XBox360. PC games for me have included the new Dawn of War, C&C Red Alert 3, World In Conflict, FEAR 2, King's Bounty, Audio Surf, WoW, EQ2, Luna beta test and more titles but since I am not at home I can only remember the ones I've played recently. All I see in your above post is a lil mouth foaming and ranting. WoW plays on a mac, I know this. Who would have thought that one of the most popular games in America would go cross platform, I mean, it only makes sense. There are several games which are not very popular which are not published on any system outside of a windows box. In case you wish to address the "But you can run bootcamp for XP!" issue, please refer to another post I have made in this exact thread as I don't wish to repeat it.

      Again, your anecdotal evidence is greatly appreciated and if you would please hold on the line; I will take it into consideration and give it the same courtesy and thought any poorly generalized rant deserves.

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    236. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am someone who needs both of these things.

      a) I live in a very rural area that has some treacherous roads, and a 4x4 vehicle is the only thing that can navigate them. In rainy season (like now) we are prone to very wet conditions, so weight is a key factor. Also in the winter, where we can get inches thick of ice on our roads and byways. My Suburban keeps me alive in those conditions, and I know if something ever happened I would be more likely to emerge alive, or at least less damaged.

      b) I mentioned the very rural area. This area is prone to dangerous wildlife, wildcats and coyotes being the predominant species. These are aggressive animals than can and will chase you down and seriously harm or kill you. My guns protect me against this very real and active threat.

      And before you start giving me garbage about moving to a city, I'm on 4th generation family land.

    237. Re:Meh. by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      This area is prone to dangerous wildlife, wildcats and coyotes being the predominant species. These are aggressive animals than can and will chase you down and seriously harm or kill you

      Suuuuuure you do. Coyote attacks on humans are even more rare than wolf attacks - as in practically never. You are in far more danger of being attacked and killed by your neighbor's dog than a coyote.

    238. Re:Meh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Got to agree with the engineering and I'd add design. On my Apple laptop the keyboard rubs against the screen, the power supply is inadequate, the DVD drive damages disks, and it gets too hot to call a laptop.

      Funny thing is I find posts from people who buy third party power adapters and DVD drives, and keep a sheet of paper between the keyboard and the screen, who still insist their machine is well designed.

      Granted, they look pretty good, but good design is more than looking pretty.

      I wonder what other laptops would look like without all those stickers all over them?

    239. Re:Meh. by AtariKee · · Score: 1

      "Sure, it may be a good product but how many people would be willing to buy the equivalent product that has little or no image / cool factor attached to it?"

      If people are suckers enough to buy into the marketing of a product ("it's a reflection of my lifestyle"), that's THEIR problem.

      Not everyone buys a product based on their commercials. Some of us are actually long-time users of something. But never underestimate the stupidity of the general public when it comes to marketing, and the inherent laziness when it comes to investigating a product before purchasing.

      --
      "You're getting brutal, Sark. Brutal and needlessly sadistic."
      "Thank you, Master Control"
      -Sark and the MCP
  3. Look at page 3 by peterdaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    See Page Three of the PDF:
    "And by holding a price umbrella over the entire market, even with arguably better products, Apple allowed the entire Windows ecosystem to establish itself underneath."

    Imaging that. Charging more for a better product!

    1. Re:Look at page 3 by orta · · Score: 1

      Imaging that. Charging more for a better product!

      Disgusting, ah well throw some more money at disguising the problem.

      --
      my band is more brutal techno punk than yours
    2. Re:Look at page 3 by Shrike82 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Imaging that. Charging more for a better product!

      That's not the point he's trying to make. He's pointing out that even if the products are better, not catering to a demographic that wants lower prices, and is probably willing to accept lower quality, means you allow competitors to gain a foothold.

      I'm still waiting for the IPod bubble to burst. Been waiting quite a while now...

      --
      You can advertise in this sig from as little as £99.99 a month!
    3. Re:Look at page 3 by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Better from a technical perspective, but irrelevant from the user's perspective. If the superiority of Mac OS X was relevant to the majority of home computer users, Apple would have a bigger market share. It is unfortunate, but most people really do not care, as long as their computer is capable of running a web browser -- so they go for the product that costs less, and that comes preinstalled on their computer. Mac OS X, with its high price tag, will remain in the minority, and Linux will lose because it does not come preinstalled, despite being gratis (from the end user perspective, if something came preinstalled, then it is free -- the cost was rolled into the price tag, so they never really see what they paid for their software).

      Arguments for quality and freedom fall on deaf ears.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    4. Re:Look at page 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's always the first page I look to as well.

      S

    5. Re:Look at page 3 by _bug_ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Imaging that. Charging more for a better product!

      I can buy a Ferrari for a few hundred thousand or I can buy a Toyota for a few thousand. The Ferrari is certainly a better product, but if all I'm using it for is to get to and from work, why the hell would I waste money on the Ferrari?

      That's why Apple's pricing is problematic. Sure it looks cute and you'll be the Apple of everyone's eye at the trendy coffee shop, but what's the point? To be seen with your laptop? Like the Ferrari, it's nothing more than a status symbol. It's showing off. I'd rather spend half the money and get more power and more capacity.

      But but but the pixels-per-inch! Yes. And you can enjoy your 300 thread count Egyptian cotton sheets. But, like your more pixels per inch, they're unnecessary.

      If you want to show off, fine. But don't try to argue value-for-money in the products you choose. It's futile.

    6. Re:Look at page 3 by rackserverdeals · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Imaging that. Charging more for a better product!

      If it is, or is not better, or is or is not worth the price is meaningless. For the vast majority of uses, there are cheaper alternatives that are good enough.

      Paying an extra $500, if you're only buying one or two computers, may not seem like a big deal. But when you are planning desktop deployments for your company and looking to order hundreds or thousands of desktops, it starts to add up. Now you're spending a lot more money and in mast cases the users won't need "better" they just need "good enough". If you care about you're employees, that savings on the desktop could be used for something that would have a greater increase in productivity, such as ergonomic chairs or a well stocked break room.

      Then you have to worry about seamless integration in your infrastructure. Fact is, Macs still don't make sense outside the home in most cases.

      --
      Dual Opteron < $600
    7. Re:Look at page 3 by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Competitive products haven't gained a foothold because iPods are priced effectively at zero.

      Of course they aren't actually priced at zero from the point of view of making a profit, but they are priced low enough that people don't bother to comparison shop, and from a competitive standpoint that's within spitting distance of zero. Apple doesn't have to watch their low-price flank, because they're occupying every price niche from $79 up to the maximum any sane person would want to spend on such a device. And in every price range, they're offering no-brainer values. Oh, you can probably get better devices for the price, but it's not worth the trouble to figure that out when you can buy an iPod. People have better things to do with their time than pouring over the specifications and features of portable media players. They just figure out how much they're willing to spend, walk over to the iPod display, and buy the next model up. Then they get on with their lives.

      Now if somebody came out with a device that inspired consumer lust, and priced it comparably to a similar iPod, then we'd see some market position turmoil and Apple would have to either tweak its products or its prices. But Zune wasn't the device to make them do it.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    8. Re:Look at page 3 by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Try holding your breath. That always works.

      The iPod bubble will only burst when the iPod competitors actually produce a quality product. I keep trying to use other products but they all do some random annoying little things that prvent me from using them. I like my products to work with me. Not fight my attempts to use them.

      I don't use windows as I can't stand the minor details in use. Quality of features over Quanity of features.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    9. Re:Look at page 3 by MadKeithV · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Why is it "unfortunate" that people pick the cheapest option that actually satisfies their needs? That's just basic economics.
      The reason Linux hasn't really caught on yet is mostly unavailability, in my opinion.

      With €200 Linux Netbooks in the stores here now, it's clear that the accessibility barrier against Linux is crumbling.
      Microsoft's anti-Linux scaremongering is also slowly failing. It's the average store salesperson (or tech support guy) that's a bit wary of having to support people who come in thinking their Linux PC is broken because they can't install their pirate copy of MS Office on it. The average buyer doesn't know and doesn't care about the difference, and with the correct setup will probably never even notice that it's NOT MS Office or Internet Explorer.

    10. Re:Look at page 3 by Shrike82 · · Score: 1

      The iPod bubble will only burst when the iPod competitors actually produce a quality product. I keep trying to use other products but they all do some random annoying little things that prvent me from using them.

      Really? All of them? I'm pretty sure I could find an iPod competitor that had all the features I wanted at a better price without any annoying bugs or "features". Maybe I have lower standards.

      Luckily my mobile phone has a decent music player anyway - which raises an interesting point. I think most people's phones can play music these days. Is it poorly implemented music software, lack of support (hardware/software), lack of awareness or just plain old "I have to look cool with my iPod at the gym"?

      --
      You can advertise in this sig from as little as £99.99 a month!
    11. Re:Look at page 3 by kegger64 · · Score: 1

      So why buy the Toyota? It's a luxury compared to a moped, or taking public transportation. Do you buy name-brand jeans? Toothpaste?

      --
      653899 - Another prime Slashdot UID
    12. Re:Look at page 3 by not+already+in+use · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      If the superiority of Mac OS X was relevant to the majority of home computer users

      I love how you say this as if it is implied truth. My experience has shown that Mac users tend to delude themselves into believing OS X is way better than it is. They seem to overlook its many shortcomings because to recognize them would be blasphemous or something. I used OS X as my primary desktop for two years. The one thing going for it is that it's pretty. Other than that, it's unnecessarily slow, has a shitty filesystem, is no more stable than XP and certainly not Vista, always had issues sleeping and waking, ilife was buggy (specifically iPhoto), is only secure through obscurity (as we've seen with the recent pwn2own contest).

      If you really want to know why OS X has a small marketshare, it's because it only appeals to people who want to take far more pride in a hardware company than anyone should, and Apple gives them that outlet with trendy, flashy products. Everybody else just wants to go about their day, using whatever is most convenient, easy and accessible.

      --
      Similes are like metaphors
    13. Re:Look at page 3 by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The ipod competitors are fine.

      There aren't any "technical" problems at this point.

      Apple is the entrenched market leader with their own proprietary online store
      and a great deal of marketing that has already occured. They also have their
      own retail outlets to push this stuff if it's not in the local Frys or Best
      Buy.

      Anyone else has to push against that.

      It's like Atari and Commodore all over again: interesting products and no marketing to speak of.

      As long as music and video remain non-proprietary, it is ultimately
      not a problem. I don't have to worry about what the market share of
      GM or Ford are when I go into Toyota dealership. Tech consumers
      shouldn't or shouldn't have to either.

      BTW, getting your own video onto an iPod sucks big donkey balls.
      The iTunes interface there is a total train wreck that clearly
      seems engineered to discourage you from doing anything but buying
      your stuff over again from the iTunes store.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    14. Re:Look at page 3 by not+already+in+use · · Score: 1

      The reason Linux hasn't really caught on yet is mostly unavailability, in my opinion.

      Linux hasn't gone anywhere because it's a terrible platform for ISV's to develop on. OSS software cannot replace commercial software completely, and as such, until GNU/Linux makes an effort to make life easier for commercial developers, Linux on the desktop will never amount to anything.

      --
      Similes are like metaphors
    15. Re:Look at page 3 by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      It really amazes me that no one has yet produced an iPod killer. It took me half an hour with my iPod before I started filing usability-related bug reports (about half of which are still open, and a few were marked as duplicates). The iPod UI, really, is not very good. And yet, somehow, all of their competitors manage to come up with something worse. Like most of the rest of Apple's products, it survives not by being good, but by being noticeably less bad than the alternatives.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    16. Re:Look at page 3 by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for the IPod bubble to burst. Been waiting quite a while now...

      I'm still waiting for this whole "Motion Picture" bubble to burst. Been waiting quite a while now...

    17. Re:Look at page 3 by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > I can buy a Ferrari for a few hundred thousand or I can buy a Toyota for a few thousand.
      > The Ferrari is certainly a better product,

            That is very much disputable. Even if you are approaching the situation on
      Ferrari's terms, it's not obvious that the Ferrari is the "right" solution.
      What Ferrari has is a lot of hype going for it. It is one of the ultimate
      "conspicuous consumption" vehicles. That hype gets conflated with various
      actual physical characteristics.

            Even if a Toyota isn't the answer (to Ferrari) there are plenty of others.

      > but if all I'm using it for is to get to and from work, why the hell would I waste money on the Ferrari?

            Except that's not the choice.

            The "Toyota" in this case is not infact a quality Japanese car but a piece of
      crap from Detroit and the "Ferrari" is not something that costs 15x more, it is
      something that costs perhaps 2x more and will last at a minimum 3 times longer.

            Many cars at 10 years old are better and more desirable than an new vehicle
      that Detroit makes.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    18. Re:Look at page 3 by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      See, I don't actually agree with that. Many "average" users would do just fine with a Linux box set up with OpenOffice and the flash plug-ins in the browser.
      Let's face it, there isn't all that much "commercial software" left that average users need.

    19. Re:Look at page 3 by sxltrex · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of a scene from Pirates of Silicon Valley:

      Jobs: "Our stuff is better!"
      Gates: "That doesn't matter."

    20. Re:Look at page 3 by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Genuine question from someone wanting an iPod alternative - Which ones are fine and work well?

      I'm looking for something that has over 32GB of flash (add-on SD cards are acceptable) and is small. Xen X-fi is the nearest I've got, but apparently it treats music on the SD card as a second-class citizen and doesn't offer the same functions on it as it will for the internal flash.

    21. Re:Look at page 3 by teg · · Score: 1

      I can buy a Ferrari for a few hundred thousand or I can buy a Toyota for a few thousand.

      Wouldn't comparing Chrysler with Lexus be a better comparison here? ;)

    22. Re:Look at page 3 by Sechr+Nibw · · Score: 1

      BTW, getting your own video onto an iPod sucks big donkey balls. The iTunes interface there is a total train wreck that clearly seems engineered to discourage you from doing anything but buying your stuff over again from the iTunes store.

      What? All you have to do is run it through iSquint (http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/19769/isquint) with it set to iPod output. It'll take about 5-10 minutes for a TV episode, maybe 15-20 for a full length movie. Once that's done, just drag it into your iTunes library, and add it to your iPod sync list. If you're on Windows, try Videora (http://www.videora.com/en-us/Converter/)

    23. Re:Look at page 3 by Canazza · · Score: 1

      I have a phone that was marketed as an MP3 player on the same level as it was a phone.
      It works. It works fine, I listen on the bus on the way in to work in the morning.

      It cost me £70, wheras classic iPods are still around £140.
      It holds whatever my microSD card holds (atm, 2Gb) which is far off the iPods 100-odd Gig (and even the iPod touch) but it does me well enough
      It makes phone calls, it's also availible on any network (unlike the iphone)
      It's smaller than most iPods (About the size of a shuffle)

      There's no clever software you have to install, no special 'dock' to put it in. It just connects via USB and pretends to be a USB flash stick.

      and re: 'i look look with my iPod at the gym' - I keep my phone in my pocket when i'm listening to music... and I don't go to the gym :)

      I don't hate Apple, or Macs, or iPods. It's the pretentious twits who act like they're special just because they buy the brand. Particularly the women... whom I like to call "Apple Tarts"

      --
      It pays to be obvious, especially if you have a reputation for being subtle.
    24. Re:Look at page 3 by Pvt_Ryan · · Score: 1

      Like the Ferrari, it's nothing more than a dick extension. It's showing off. I'd rather spend half the money and get more power and more capacity.

      Fixed that for ya ;)

    25. Re:Look at page 3 by not+already+in+use · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as an "average" user. You must also consider that there are typically more than one user to a computer. Also, the fact that you say most users would be fine with Linux if all they needed was Firefox and Flash is certainly no testament to Linux. If anything it's an ironic statement, to say this "free and open" operating system is just fine in a limited capacity.

      --
      Similes are like metaphors
    26. Re:Look at page 3 by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course they aren't actually priced at zero from the point of view of making a profit, but they are priced low enough that people don't bother to comparison shop, and from a competitive standpoint that's within spitting distance of zero.

      Even when they do a comparison shop, it comes down to convenience, not just price.

      A few months ago, I was at Best Buy doing some last-minute Christmas shopping (it's the only time I ever go there). I eavesdropped on a Best Buy employee discussing different mp3 players for a customer. The customer wanted to know why the Creative (or whoever) product was priced much lower than the Apple product- they both had the same capacity, and color screens, but the non-Apple player was 25% less. The employee said it came down to itunes... he simplified it by saying it's "much easier to put music on the ipod". He then went on to say it was much more difficult to do on the other mp3 player.

      The customer ended up buying the Apple product.

      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes). People pay the premium (Apple tax) not because they're pretentious fanboys (well, some do), but rather they believe Apple's products are the easiest and most convenient to use.

      But Zune wasn't the device to make them do it.

      I feel the biggest reason for failure was that the Zune was way overpriced. Had MS priced them much lower than the comparable ipod, they would have had much more market penetration. Unfortunately, greed got in the way of intelligence (it happens often), and priced each zune similarly to the corresponding (capacity-wise) ipod, and believed that simply having a bigger screen would draw most people in. Apparently, MS forgot to use their own business model when they marketed the Zune.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    27. Re:Look at page 3 by tautog · · Score: 1

      The issue is the mindset that all similar products are direct competitors. A Mac does not necessarily compete with a machine running Linux or Windows. They serve different purposes.

      The same with the iPod - it doesn't compete with the $19 cheapie you can buy at Walmart.

      If you need a car analogy, BMW and Mercedes Benz do not compete with Ford or Chevrolet. They exist in the same ecosystem, but do not appeal to the same consumers. I can afford a BMW, but drive Fords, because they're better suited to my needs and I am content with their relative quality and value.

      Additionally, I personally use a Macbook Pro, have an Ubuntu box in my home office and use XP at work. Each has a niche and fills it well. I prefer the MBP for my day to day machine and am willing to pay for it. I'd love to have a Mac Pro in my home office, but in that environment, it's not necessary.

      Apple, Mercedes & BMW don't care that there are lower-budget markets out there. It's not relevant to their business plan. The same for Dell, Ford or Chevrolet, they know that Apple or BMW fans aren't going to buy their products.

    28. Re:Look at page 3 by dokebi · · Score: 1

      Apple gives them that outlet with trendy, flashy products.

      You mean some people are willing to pay more for trendy, flashy, more expensive products while the masses want something cheap? And these "luxury" vendors actually make money with a smaller market share? Shocking! (Toyota/Lexus, Honda/Acura, Chevy/Cadillac, Mini/BMW)

      --
      In Soviet Russia, articles before post read *you*!
    29. Re:Look at page 3 by gobbo · · Score: 1

      What Ferrari has is a lot of hype going for it. It is one of the ultimate "conspicuous consumption" vehicles. That hype gets conflated with various actual physical characteristics.

      That's great -- you are such a nerd! It's obvious that the Ferrari offers something very tangible to a single male: statistically verifiable privileged access to fine-looking females.

      The "Toyota" in this case is not infact a quality Japanese car but a piece of crap from Detroit and the "Ferrari" is not something that costs 15x more, it is something that costs perhaps 2x more and will last at a minimum 3 times longer.

      The comparison I make for my customers is between a toyota and a lada, since I'm likely the one who'll be doing the servicing, and I'd rather not. The apple customers just come back way less, and though any TCO observation I have is small-scale and anecdotal, for many of my point-and-click customers, a Mac is a better value over 5 years (especially if you consider resale value). To be fair, I have done quite a few xp to ubuntu/opensuse conversions for people as well, and refuse to do malware cleanups any more, which around here cost them about $125.

      Many cars at 10 years old are better and more desirable than an new vehicle that Detroit makes.

      My 14-year-old Ford Escort wagon is so good mainly because it was designed by mazda.

    30. Re:Look at page 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The employee said it came down to itunes... he simplified it by saying it's "much easier to put music on the ipod". He then went on to say it was much more difficult to do on the other mp3 player.

      Ack!

      It took me days to figure out how to use iTunes. I'm still pissed you can just drag and drop files onto the player.

    31. Re:Look at page 3 by AmaranthineNight · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I run both XP and Mac OSX on my macbook and for most tasks OSX has been faster. It also, unlike windows, doesn't like to completely freeze my UI and keep me from killing the software running on it. (I use the terminal for this).

      I have never once had an issue sleeping and waking, and I almost never actually shut my computer down. I'm not sure what's so shitty about the filesystem, but I'm not a particular fan of the file manager (Finder), so I mostly just search for what I need in Spotlight...which is faster than I've ever seen Windows search.

    32. Re:Look at page 3 by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      Mine Gott!

      I would surely mod you +10 if I could.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    33. Re:Look at page 3 by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Copy and paste music file management isn't computer savvy. It's a masochistic tendency of anal-retentive people who failed to realize the nineties are over and that metadata is good.

    34. Re:Look at page 3 by Abreu · · Score: 1

      Indeed... A couple of years ago I got a Sony music player (I can't even say MP3 player because the damn thing only played its own propietary format)
      It was horrible. Really, I mean horrible

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    35. Re:Look at page 3 by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      Now if somebody came out with a device that inspired consumer lust, and priced it comparably to a similar iPod, then we'd see some market position turmoil and Apple would have to either tweak its products or its prices. But Zune wasn't the device to make them do it.

      Nintendo had a chance to do this with the DSi, in fact looking at the whole DSiWare store setup they still have a chance. That's what they could be planning with the next iteration of the DS. Music channel for the Wii and DS anyone?

      I already use my DSi as my mp3 player. Well music player: it only plays AACs. Ironically I had to use itunes to re-rip my CDs so that I could play them on my DSi (despite never having owned an ipod), Nintendo missed a trick by not allowing mp3 playback.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    36. Re:Look at page 3 by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Handbrake has presets for the iPod as well and with the most recent version it will handle various file formats as well as its tradition DVD capabilities. Either double click the resulting files or just drop them onto iTunes.

    37. Re:Look at page 3 by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Only pretentious jerks buy toothpaste. Wood ash does just fine. All those sheeple paying the "I don't have the taste of wood ash all day" tax, it's sad really.

    38. Re:Look at page 3 by not+already+in+use · · Score: 1

      I run both XP and Mac OSX on my macbook and for most tasks OSX has been faster

      I don't know what your setup looks like, but I don't run any AV software, which always slows things down.

      --
      Similes are like metaphors
    39. Re:Look at page 3 by Helios1182 · · Score: 1

      How is it difficult to add music/video to iTunes? I just take a folder and drag it to iTunes -- that's it.

    40. Re:Look at page 3 by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      The employee said it came down to itunes... he simplified it by saying it's "much easier to put music on the ipod". He then went on to say it was much more difficult to do on the other mp3 player.

      The customer ended up buying the Apple product.

      So customers are willing to pay more for hardware when it's provided with more easier, more intuitive software.

      Newsflash!

      (This is how my company maintains high hardware margins for our industry and still knocks the socks off our competitors.)

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    41. Re:Look at page 3 by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes).

      And many of us who are savvy enough simply don't give a shit about whether we can, but rather care about what makes our lives easier. That's what Creative & Co. have missed WRT the iPod and what many of the anti-Mac crowd have too. The latter imply that any Mac users are vacuous freshmen who like shiny cases and emo bands while ignoring that, for many tasks, OS X is easier to use and maintain even for those knowledgeable enough to struggle successfully with Windows.

    42. Re:Look at page 3 by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      The Ferrari is certainly a better product...

      You've never owned a Ferrari -- or any other exotic sports car -- have you?

      The Ferrari costs more to drive (fuel, tickets, insurance), is less reliable (my former boss used to own a Ferrari Mondial, and was *constantly* fixing things that were broken) and costs more to repair (premium parts for a premium vehicle). If all you need to do is drive to and from work, the Toyota is certainly the better product. On the other hand, if you want a conspicuous status symbol, buy the Ferrari.

      And that's where your obligatory /. car analogy breaks down.

      Windows is the Ferrari in this example. IME, it's less reliable, less suitable for what most people need, but it's what everybody (well, everybody who doesn't know better) wants. I'm not a Mac fanboy -- I use Linux -- but for most people, I suspect that a Mac would be the better tool. Need to type papers for school? Mac can do that. Need e-mail and to surf the web? Yep, Mac can do that. Don't want to waste your time and CPU cycles running A/V, anti-spyware, installing the endless critical security updates, etc.? Run a Mac, instead.

      Need a high-performance, DirectX 10-capable, latest-greatest gaming rig? Neither Linux nor a Mac are probably going to do what you need; buy Vista with the most expensive hardware you can afford. But now you are talking about a PC as an entertainment device, not a tool. It's a Ferrari -- conspicuous consumption, totally unneccessary, and probably something you will constantly be tweaking, just to keep it running.

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    43. Re:Look at page 3 by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Genuine question from someone wanting an iPod alternative - Which ones are fine and work well?

      I tend to stick with Cowon and iRiver here (had trouble with Creative in Linux because they refused to behave as a proper USB storage device). They typically have very good sound (if you get a better headset, I use a Shure) and come in all sizes. I currently use the Cowon D2 which suits my needs just fine (although it's too small for your requirements).

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    44. Re:Look at page 3 by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Fact is, Macs still don't make sense outside the home in most cases.

      Other than vastly lower support costs. Other than Microsoft costing companies tens of billions in extra support costs for their crappy, insecure operating systems.

    45. Re:Look at page 3 by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      My experience has shown that Mac users

      ...are annoyed by blathering morons who speak out of their ass? Who knew?

    46. Re:Look at page 3 by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes). People pay the premium (Apple tax) not because they're pretentious fanboys (well, some do), but rather they believe Apple's products are the easiest and most convenient to use.

      Exactly. I bought a Diamond Rio when they first came out. At first it was cool but after a while I used it less and less because I didn't want to have to change out the batteries all the time and it was a pain to change out my music. Years later, I bought an iPod while my brother bought a Dell MP3 player. We're both technical. He's an EE and I'm a ChE. He said Apple was just about looks. He ignored my advice and experience when it came to MP3 players. I asked him how his Dell player was doing last Christmas to see if it held up. He hadn't used it in years because it was too inconvenient to maintain his music collection.

      I feel the biggest reason for failure was that the Zune was way overpriced. Had MS priced them much lower than the comparable ipod, they would have had much more market penetration. Unfortunately, greed got in the way of intelligence (it happens often), and priced each zune similarly to the corresponding (capacity-wise) ipod, and believed that simply having a bigger screen would draw most people in. Apparently, MS forgot to use their own business model when they marketed the Zune.

      I think pricing is one part of the equation. iPod is the market leader. If any company wants to unseat the market leader, they have to offer very compelling reasons and there are few advantages to a Zune. The Zune has some nice features that an iPod classic doesn't have. Unfortunately the iPod Touch matches most features other than capacity and radio and has features that the Zune does not have like multi-touch screen. The main feature of wireless sharing was so restricted that it wasn't really much of a feature: You can only share for 3 days, etc and only if the copyright holder allows it. Also it restricts all media, copyrighted or not, even your own files. Add to the problem of a smaller ecosystem and the player not compatible with other MS music you may have purchased, etc. Then even if you want to buy music online--points? Seriously, you need to buy points. With all those caveats, it's not surprising that the Zune only has a 4% marketshare. I also think most of that was gained when MS had to dump the first generation at bargain prices when the 2nd generation came out. Otherwise they would have even a smaller percentage.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    47. Re:Look at page 3 by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      BTW, getting your own video onto an iPod sucks big donkey balls.
      The iTunes interface there is a total train wreck that clearly
      seems engineered to discourage you from doing anything but buying
      your stuff over again from the iTunes store.

      Really? Is ripping with Handbrake and dragging and dropping into your iTunes library that hard? The worst thing about video on iPod is their expensive proprietary connector.

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    48. Re:Look at page 3 by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      I love how you say this as if it is implied truth. My experience has shown that Mac users tend to delude themselves into believing OS X is way better than it is. They seem to overlook its many shortcomings because to recognize them would be blasphemous or something. I used OS X as my primary desktop for two years. The one thing going for it is that it's pretty. Other than that, it's unnecessarily slow, has a shitty filesystem, is no more stable than XP and certainly not Vista, always had issues sleeping and waking, ilife was buggy (specifically iPhoto), is only secure through obscurity (as we've seen with the recent pwn2own contest).

      This is pretty much my experience too. I only ran OS X for a bit over a year before going back to Linux but it mostly felt to me like a prettier Windows with a weird interface with odd bugs and several strange inconsistencies. I can't really comment on its stability compared to that of Windows since I only run Windows XP occasionally for the odd game and haven't really touched Vista but it certainly wasn't as stable as my Linux machines. Overall it was OK. It's just that I didn't like it much. The interface wasn't friendly in my eyes (compared to a typical X11 desktop) and the Unix side was so messed up that it was completely incomprehensible. So after a while the Apple laptop started a new career as a paperweight and I went back to what I was comfortable with.

      Overall it seems to me that Apple, following in Microsoft's steps, doesn't care all that much about security (although presumably for different reasons). Granted the Mac machines are currently mostly safe because like the Linux and assorted Unix they represent a minority of users. But should that change, they would quickly become ripe targets. Of course the same could apply to the Unix machines. But they aren't the ones that fall flat on their face in all the hacking contests.

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    49. Re:Look at page 3 by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes).

      Don't get me wrong, and I agree with most of your points but that claim isn't true (at least with me and my friends). When you use itunes, at first it isn't intuitive at all. I almost spent days trying to find out how not to put 60GB of my music to 30GB ipod. How to put only selected songs, how to put playlists etc. Now when I know it fully, it seems kinda logical, but it isn't intuitive for first time users. And yes, it makes much more sense to drag and drop (or copy&paste) your music files to your music player (which ipod/iphone doesn't support). And installing itunes after a system reinstall is pita too. I never managed to get my playlists back, and there is always a problem when you use the option to "copy imported music to your music folder" not do duplicate the files. And speaking of duplicates, ever tried to get rid of hundreds (or thousands) of duplicates, triplicates, replicants in your itunes library? It isn't nice, I can assure you unfortunately.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    50. Re:Look at page 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The employee said it came down to itunes... he simplified it by saying it's "much easier to put music on the ipod". He then went on to say it was much more difficult to do on the other mp3 player.

      So in other words the salesman lied to get a larger commission or make his quota. Wow - big shock there.

      I've got a Samsung mp3 player. It's not "much easier" to use an ipod - in fact I'd say it's easier with the Samsung because I don't have to install itunes.

    51. Re:Look at page 3 by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      You just needed to draw a parallel here. They have nicely filled every price point in the music player line so when you go shopping you always find an ipod for your money. But this just isn't true for their computer line. They only have 3 different laptops, 1 desktop computer (which is seriously overpriced), and 2 desktop computers but with integrated displays (I'm not counting mac pro). I have no doubt in my mind that if they filled the gaps in their computer line they would have a much greater market share and very probably much more $$$.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    52. Re:Look at page 3 by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      I don't know that it was greed. Ballmer probably sincerely believes his products are all better than Apple's. I would bet that he felt they should be priced equally because people would "see" their obvious superiority, and choose them. He probably rejected any suggestion to price them lower.

    53. Re:Look at page 3 by not+already+in+use · · Score: 1

      Overall it seems to me that Apple, following in Microsoft's steps, doesn't care all that much about security

      Vista implements security features not yet seen in Linux or OS X that make it inherently more secure than the latter two systems. Address Space Layout Randomization (ASLR) was quoted as the difference maker in the pwn2own contest, according to the hacker who took down OS X within minutes. Also quoted was IE8's sand boxing (process per tab) which behaves much like Chrome, although I think IE8 implemented it first. I know this is slashdot, but for the sake of objectivity, give credit where credit is due.

      --
      Similes are like metaphors
    54. Re:Look at page 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I just used Quicktime Pro to "export to iPod" and it was on my iPhone.

    55. Re:Look at page 3 by raddan · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually, this is not true. We did this evaluation recently, and ended up going with Macs for our employees. It has had the added, unexpected, benefit that our employees who switched are stupidly happy now.

      Anyway, in the past, we've gone with WinXP machines for the reasons you mention. They're dirt cheap, the hardware is pretty reliable (you can get great deals from HP when buying in bulk, and their machines are a pleasure to work with), and the software... well, it functions anyway. Macs always came out more expensive, but not significantly so.

      The crucial thing that always tipped the scale in favor of MS was: legacy application support. We have a number of legacy apps-- some are more than 10 years old. XP mostly handled these apps OK. With Vista-- they simply do not work anymore. Unfortunately, they were written well before my time, so we do not have access to code, and the original developers have now moved on to other things. We're stuck with them until we replace them.

      So we're now faced with having to run them inside a virtualization environment until we can replace them. Heck, if we're going to do that... why stick with Windows?

      We looked at Linux, Vista, and the Mac. Linux seemed like a great option, and maybe in the future, it will be, but there were some dealbreakers, since it would require quite a bit more IT overhead to get going than, say, a Mac. Vista was disappointing, and frustrating to use, even for IT folk. Now, the Mac... it turned out to be quite easy to get going! We have it integrated into our AD. We've so far opted not to go with schema changes, but setting up Macs has been a breeze, and deploying them has been even easier than deploying Windows. No problems with SATA/IDE/driver problems-- the same disk image can be applied to ANY Intel Mac, and the image deployment tools come built-in! User templates can be set up just as easily as they can with Windows, and Macs can use our existing CIFS shares. SSO works!

      When we compared the price per machine (including software) between Windows and the Mac, the Windows machines were marginally cheaper (like $25 per machine)-- UNTIL we mentioned this to our Apple rep. She dropped the price for us, and we ended up with a package that was cheaper than the Windows machines.

      Add on the fact that administrating these machines is easy (no AV required!), we can do SSH and remote desktop out of the box, and for us, using Macs has been a clear winner.

      We'd go with Macs again, and this is despite the fact that I have previous ranted here about how Apple's enterprise support sucks. Their AppleCare program for consumer-level stuff is actually pretty good.

      For the record, all of my personal machines are Linux or OpenBSD. No Apple or Windows machines (not including my iPod).

    56. Re:Look at page 3 by nine-times · · Score: 1

      not catering to a demographic that wants lower prices, and is probably willing to accept lower quality, means you allow competitors to gain a foothold.

      In that sense, it still doesn't seem bad for Apple. You're saying, "Although they're doing well in the market that they really want, they aren't doing well in a market that they've chosen not to participate in." Well, oh well.

      I'm still waiting for the IPod bubble to burst. Been waiting quite a while now...

      What do you mean burst? It's not like real estate or the tech bubble. The iPod may saturate the market, which will lead to decreased sales. Then again, there's only so bad you can feel for a company who has decreased sales because everyone who might be in the market for one of their products already owns their products.

    57. Re:Look at page 3 by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      It took me half an hour with my iPod before I started filing usability-related bug reports (about half of which are still open, and a few were marked as duplicates). The iPod UI, really, is not very good.

      Such as? I'm interested in hearing your qualitative and/or quantitative reasoning on the iPod's deficiencies.

    58. Re:Look at page 3 by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      I don't hate Apple, or Macs, or iPods. It's the pretentious twits who act like they're special just because they buy the brand.

      As opposed to all the pretentious twits that go out of their way to mention that they don't buy Brand X for Reason Y.

    59. Re:Look at page 3 by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 1

      That's the point I'm trying to make. iTunes is a bit cumbersome, actually lags on my quad core system sometimes, and crashes often- it's even worse than windows media player IMO. Still people are being led to believe it's the easiest way to manage their music collection.

      I guess they simply want a pretty-looking (even if semi-functional) UI rather than simply open a folder and drag-drop music files into it.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    60. Re:Look at page 3 by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      I know this is slashdot, but for the sake of objectivity, give credit where credit is due.

      Granted for IE8, mostly because I read about it here. :)

      Though honestly I don't really care about what happens in the Windows world (or the Mac world for that matter). I don't use any and stay as far away from them as I can. It may be that Vista *finally* took some structural steps to secure the system. Which of course *is* a good thing since they are the prime target. It benefits not only their users but all others as well.
      I really didn't follow what's been going on on that front, only (and then from a distance) what UI decisions were made (and then, apparently, partially discarded in Win 7).

      So I'll agree that MS has indeed been paying a bit more attention to security lately. Certainly not enough considering how exposed they are, being under the spotlight all the time (with their huge market share) and all, but it's *a lot* of progress from just a couple of years back. And something I actually wouldn't have expected from them back then.

      And regarding Apple they *feel* like they are where Microsoft was five years ago (in their approach to security). As in "we can't be bothered with that, we're too busy doing cool stuff" (or wanking the marketing team, or whatever it is they're doing over there). After all they have built their system upon a fairly decent base (which they have thoroughly messed up, but still).

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    61. Re:Look at page 3 by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 1

      So you're saying that it was hubris rather than greed. Fair enough. My point still stands though. If the Zune was priced 25% lower than the comparable ipod, I would have bought one over the iPod Classic- I bought my 160GB classic for less than a 120GB Zune cost (at the time), oddly enough.

      It doesn't make any sense.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    62. Re:Look at page 3 by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that my iPod was third generation, and died a couple of years ago, so my memory is quite foggy. I would look them up in Apple's bug tracking system, but for some reason they decided to remove my access to the iPod UI bugs that I've filed (this is one of the main reasons I no longer file bug reports for Apple products - they can hire me as a consultant if they really want to my opinion [which they almost certainly don't]).

      Display of classical music was very bad. I can't remember the details, but I think it displayed the artist but not the composer. This meant that I had a lot of things like 'Symphony 5 - Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra.' Great, but the thing I really care about for classical music is whose symphony number 5?

      The thing that really bugged me was the hold switch on the corded remote control. A minor thing, but it was upside down. For some reason, on-off switches in the USA are the opposite way up to most of the rest of the world, and they didn't localise this.

      If you left it for a while, it ignored the first button tap. This meant that you could not use it without looking - do you press play once or twice to make it play? It depends on exactly how many minutes since you last pressed a button.

      There were quite a few more issues I came across, but these there the ones that I recall a few years later. I played with one of the newer ones in a shop a while ago, and it seemed to have regressed in several ways (much like iTunes, which has had more UI regressions than improvements in every release since 4.2). The third generation was not bad. I found a dozen or so UI issues that were irritating, which is close to a record low for any device I've used (my mother's kettle, for example, has a worse user interface, and does a lot less). The newer ones seem to have sacrificed usability for features.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    63. Re:Look at page 3 by Draek · · Score: 1

      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes).

      Most people in the US, thankyouverymuch. Here in South America I've yet to see an iPod in the wild, it's all el-cheapo chinese MP3/MP4 players and people seem to have very little trouble using them. And frankly, it's not like you need a PhD in CS to drag & drop some files on Windows Explorer, despite what the Apple marketing machine may want to tell you.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    64. Re:Look at page 3 by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yes. How is n00b supposed to know that?

      What happened to iTunes being the "one stop solution" that
      rescues poor n00bs from the burdens of a multitude of tools?

      Apple fanboys are so funny.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    65. Re:Look at page 3 by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      Look at Cowon devices - can't guarantee the 32GB or expandable storage, but the sound quality puts _every_ iPod to shame.

      I'm using the iAudio 7 (8GB) right now. Cost a whole 85 Euros, has a parametric (frequency, width and gain) 5-band equalizer, plays FLAC and OGG, and, most importantly, is usable as both a "music device" and a USB storage device. Basically, you can hook it up to iTunes or Winamp like an iPod, or you can just drag and drop...

      If you're willing to pay a bit more, the D2+ and S9 are good places to start... great PMPs.

    66. Re:Look at page 3 by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > That's great -- you are such a nerd! It's obvious that the Ferrari offers something very
      > tangible to a single male: statistically verifiable privileged access to fine-looking females.

              As a fluzzie magnet it is still overpriced.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    67. Re:Look at page 3 by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      Even when they do a comparison shop, it comes down to convenience, not just price.

      Indeed. I wanted to conveniently attach my device to any computer, anywhere, any time. My Linux desktop and laptop, my girlfriend's Linux desktop and Mac laptop, my friend's WinXP desktop, my sister's Vista (yech) laptop. And you can bet your ass I didn't buy an iPod.

      Most people aren't savvy enough to understand how to copy and paste mp3 files to a USB storage device, or how to buy music online without using itunes (or even rip a CD without itunes). People pay the premium (Apple tax) not because they're pretentious fanboys (well, some do), but rather they believe Apple's products are the easiest and most convenient to use.

      I'm sorry, are you seriously trying to suggest that iTunes is simpler than copying a file? Really?

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    68. Re:Look at page 3 by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      But, even in the Windows world, you don't need to copy-and-paste music files to your non-Apple media player. Windows Media player does it all quite seamlessly.

    69. Re:Look at page 3 by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Now imagine the iPod strategy was taken the full run with desktop PC's. It physically hurts to think about how powerful Apple could be if they released some low-end PC systems, so that the iPod Shuffle crowd could have a matching Mac Minimini.

    70. Re:Look at page 3 by rts008 · · Score: 1

      He hadn't used it in years because it was too inconvenient to maintain his music collection.

      That directly relates to something I have not seen mentioned here regarding mp3 players.

      "Plays For Sure"(tm) and the whole DRM fiasco.

      The iPod/iTunes package gave Windows users a consistent means/interface to manage their music and player.
      With other mp3 players, you had to use either the 3rd party software that came with it, or Windows Media Player. Most people in the Windows world are conditioned to install the driver/software cd that comes with the hardware...and most don't think of WMP. All of these app's worked differently.

      What does this have to do with DRM?
      Depending on the mp3 itself(DRM? What kind, if so?), some 3rd party software would not transfer the DRM 'bits' with the mp3 resulting in a file on the player you can see, takes up space, but will not playback.
      Many people were savvy enough to rip mp3's from cd's using WMP, but with the defaults, WMP adds DRM while ripping.(it can be turned of if you know where to dig into the settings to turn off 'copy protect my music') These mp3's would not playback on mp3 players when loaded by the 'drag_n_drop' method using Explorer. If you sync'ed the player with WMP, they would work.
      The same with those subscription services that used the MS 'Plays For Sure' protocol.
      It became a confused tangle of a plethora of 'end to end' attempts.

      I worked tech support for Creative Labs up until about 6 months after the first iPods hit the market, and dealt with all of this crap repeatedly...and daily.

      *LOL!!!* I still chuckle about the PHB's at CL reaction to the iPod!!! They were scared shitless!...apparently with good reason.

      I think the whole 'Plays For Sure' mess had to have helped iPod sales! Then MS' own Zune would not work with their own 'Plays For Sure'. Egads!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    71. Re:Look at page 3 by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I bought my phone (a Sony Ericsson w580i) in part because of its music playing capabilities. Unfortunately, the need to carry around separate headphones just for the phone means that I rarely use it to play music - I carry around headphones for my laptop already, so it seems idiotic to have to carry around a second pair for my phone.

    72. Re:Look at page 3 by rts008 · · Score: 1

      I think most people's phones can play music these days. Is it poorly implemented music software, lack of support (hardware/software), lack of awareness or just plain old "I have to look cool with my iPod at the gym"?

      I would say there are some of both involved wit some, but I think many see an mp3 player as a way to get away from charging their phone's battery more often.

      Note: I can't speak from any experience...never owned either device, but I'm going by comments I have seen by many to that effect here on slashdot in past discussions. :-)

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    73. Re:Look at page 3 by Gizzmonic · · Score: 1

      What happened to iTunes being the "one stop solution" that
      rescues poor n00bs from the burdens of a multitude of tools?

      The MPAA and our elected officials happened. If it were legal, ripping DVDs would be in iTunes, you can bet on that. Now compare this method to getting movies onto the second most popular portable movie playing device, the PSP. It's exactly the same method. Really, what else do you want Apple to do?

      --
      (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    74. Re:Look at page 3 by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Linux hasn't gone anywhere because it's a terrible platform for ISV's to develop on. OSS software cannot replace commercial software completely, and as such, until GNU/Linux makes an effort to make life easier for commercial developers, Linux on the desktop will never amount to anything.

      As long as developers are bitching and whining about the difficulty of using F/OSS and GNU/Linux for proprietary, locked code, then all is good with the world, as the GPL2/3 license is working correctly as designed.

      F/OSS and GNU/Linux is aimed at end-user control of the software. Proprietary software vendors and their developers are the antithesis of F/OSS and GNU/Linux.
      Only the fanatics are trying to take over the world, not most of us.

      Your 'ISV's' are wanting to maintain control of the software after development and released/sold/whatever, which is diametrically opposite of F/OSS and GNU/Linux.

      Obligatory /. car analogy:

      It's like complaining that your sedan can't haul a cargo container readily...and it does not matter from which side you are arguing!...It's like hearing a multitude of Chewbacca Defenses.

      GNU/Linux will never take over the world, despite a few fanatics that proclaim otherwise. It was never intended to. It was made for those that wanted the freedom to hack their computers, to do what they wanted to do their way. To make sure it stayed that way, the GPLx stepped in.

      What I use is what I am happy with, what anyone else cares to use...not my business or my problem.
      The only time it really even comes to my notice is when others come to me with their computer problems, which happens frequently. Those that are open to the idea, I will either set them up with a) a live cd b)dual boot c)full *nix install. Those also get support by me when they need it.
      Everyone else, I help them back up their 'stuff', and advise them to nuke and fresh install, or take it to someone who is willing to work on Windows to do it for them.

         

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    75. Re:Look at page 3 by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Damn spoiled kids now days.

      Have to have wood ash now do ye?

      In my day we chewed on sticks...and liked it!

      *goes back to looking for misplaced dentures*

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    76. Re:Look at page 3 by danheretic · · Score: 1

      but they are priced low enough that people don't bother to comparison shop

      Maybe in your world $20 doesn't make a difference to someone's budget, but there are many, many people to whom it does.

  4. Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you kidding me? Apple has been the darling of newsrooms for as long as I can remember. There was a time you could walk into any newspaper or television newsroom in the country and not see anything BUT Apple computers. The press LOVES Apple. They slovenly follow every Apple product launch with almost rapturous attention (at the iPhone launch, I think I saw more than one reporter have an on-camera orgasm) and talk up even the most mundane Apple announcement. Hell, they've been treating Steve Jobs' recent illness as if the Pope himself had cancer.

    Only the most rabid Apple fanboy (who thinks NOTHING good should ever be said of MS, and Apple can do no wrong) would think there is anything even resembling a "pro-Microsoft press conspiracy" out there. Most of the positive press coverage I see about MS is either when they have a MAJOR launch (the 360, a new Halo game, etc.) or is related to Bill Gates' considerable charitable activities (which *deserves* to be covered and extolled, if nothing more than to encourage other rich guys to do it). Most of their stuff barely gets a nod. I don't remember a single mainstream, non tech-press, story on the Zune launch, for example.

    If anyone is getting cheated by the mainstream press, it's Linux. I've yet to see a single mainstream news story on THAT. It wasn't even mentioned in any of the news stories on the OLPC program (which got considerable press).

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Only the most rabid Apple fanboy (who thinks NOTHING good should ever be said of MS, and Apple can do no wrong) would think there is anything even resembling a "pro-Microsoft press conspiracy" out there. Most of the positive press coverage I see about MS is either when they have a MAJOR launch (the 360, a new Halo game, etc.) or is related to Bill Gates' considerable charitable activities (which *deserves* to be covered and extolled, if nothing more than to encourage other rich guys to do it). Most of their stuff barely gets a nod. I don't remember a single mainstream, non tech-press, story on the Zune launch, for example.

      I'm not an Apple fan; but I still think nothing good should be said about M$. The company is still getting nailed for illegal business practices like the price fixing scheme in Germany.

      Everything the company does is suspect, and part same old embrace, extend, and extinguish business model.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    2. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by pohl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I can remember longer. In the pre-www days the trade rags had a heavy MS bias. Apple was contantly "beleaguered", and didn't become the darling until the iPod was a hit, really.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    3. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Lighten up, Francis. They're just another corporation, not a conspiracy to eat your children.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    4. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by iamhigh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The ipod and OSX were both released in 2001. I think there is a bit of causation there. OS9 sucked hard compared to W2k; even 10.0 was pretty terrible (buggy as hell). The press had just about every reason to hate Macs in the late 90's and through the release of 10.1 (also in 2001, but you got a freebie upgrade on that one, IIRC... again cuz 10.0 sucked).

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    5. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I entirely agree. Whilst one might be thankful if Microsoft gets less promotion from the media, this is more than simply being anti-MS: as you note, Linux doesn't get any attention either. Back in the 80s and 90s when there were other major platforms around, I remember that much of the mainstream press pretended there was a Windows/Mac duopoly (they had to cover DOS/Windows/PCs, because they were mainstream in business, but they also had to cover the Mac too - but nothing else).

      The Iphone shows how the pro-Apple bias applies even when Microsoft aren't around. There are billions of phones being sold, from major companies like Nokia. Features such as 3G and Internet access have been standard on even basic phones for years. Yet the Iphone comes along, and gets all the free press.

    6. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Kotten · · Score: 1

      In sweden most articles are microsoft biased. Even when it is an article that is possitive about a non-microsoft product the headline is still trying to negate it not to make big brother angry.

      But Sweden was the only country where Windows 1.x was selling well.

      PS. Yes, the Apple magazines are positive to Apple products even here.

      --
      Note to self: Make a sig
    7. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Yup. And if not kept in check, the mob mentality in any corporation would lead to your children being turned into Soylent Green.

      The only thing preventing this is fear of legal consequences.

      Companies in this day and age are not only allowed to morally run amok but they are expected to. It's an ideal that's worshipped by the unwashed masses that can never hope to be anything more than the raw material on the Soylent Green production line.

      That worship of total amorality in the Banking industry has worked so well so far don't you think?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    8. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by hoooocheymomma · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Their visual studio products are second to none in my opinion, and you can get them for free in their express products. IntelliText speeds up my development time, teaches me the framework while I'm using it, and encourages me to use better coding practices.

      Say what you will about how unethically and inefficiently they run the rest of their business (if you don't, I will!), but they make some awesome products for developers.

    9. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're just another corporation, not a conspiracy to eat your children.

      Ah, yes. Marketing 101. If you can't make a reasonable argument try to smear them with something extreme, completely irrelevant but distasteful.

      They are not just another corporation. As usual, they try to claim everybody does their business "tactics" are business however there are very few other legitimate businesses that do what they do, everything from deliberate sabotage (DRDOS etc.) to astroturf to deliberately engaging in wholesale fraud if they think they can get away with it legally. They act more like spammers than a legitimate business.

    10. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We pretty much have the same thing here in Holland. Businesses and the media are really into Microsoft, and Apple mostly just gets covered in case they release a new iPhone or iPod. For instance, this summer will see the (near) simultaneous introduction of the two biggest OSes, guess who's going to get the most coverage?

      Businesses especially are very traditional and conformist over here, and as long as it's Microsoft it may well be shit, but it's what everybody else is using, so it must have something going for it. You just haven't found it yet, so keep looking!

    11. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Only the most rabid Apple fanboy (who thinks NOTHING good should ever be said of MS, and Apple can do no wrong) would think there is anything even resembling a "pro-Microsoft press conspiracy" out there.

      You have a point, but I'll give you a personal example of how sometimes "independent reports" aren't as independent as they claim. Earlier in this decade I worked in a US office of a wholly owned subsidiary of an EU telcom giant. I'd be surprised if more than 1 person out of 100 here even heard of us or knew that we were owned by our parent company. My company put out a supposedly independent report that showed that the total cost of ownership of a PC running Windows was lower than Linux. The report didn't get a lot of press, but it was out there. What nobody knew though was that Microsoft was one of our customers and I could drive to our data center and point out the Microsoft equipment that we hosted for them. Can you say "conflict of interest"? I'm not going to suggest that Microsoft encouraged my company to produce this report, but I definitely think that it was an attempt to suck up to one of our customers in the hopes that we could get more business out of them by saying how great they were. So when I see anything that says how great and cheap Microsoft is, I wonder if there's a secret business relationship going on behind the scenes like there was with my former employer.

    12. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Whalou · · Score: 1

      For instance, this summer will see the (near) simultaneous introduction of the two biggest OSes, guess who's going to get the most coverage?

      The one with the biggest marketshare?

      --
      English is not this .sig mother tongue...
    13. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by kkissane · · Score: 1

      Two words. "Beleaguered Apple." No news story for years named Apple with out calling it "Beleaguered Apple." So if the press loves Apple, why?

    14. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Apple's business practices are much much MUCH worse than MS' but they simply don't have the market share for it to be as terrifying.

    15. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by grub · · Score: 2, Funny


      Hell, they've been treating Steve Jobs' recent illness as if the Pope himself had cancer.

      Stands to reason, both those men run a world-wide cult.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    16. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Apple has been the darling of newsrooms for as long as I can remember. There was a time you could walk into any newspaper or television newsroom in the country and not see anything BUT Apple computers.

      Wouldn't that be because Apple for the longest time was the platform for desktop publishing? Maybe, perhaps that was the reason you saw more Macs than PCs. It started to change after Win95 though when PCs finally got some decent desktop software and ports.

      The press LOVES Apple.

      I think Apple just does a better job at marketing their products. Part of is their model and their target demographics. Apple makes a whole product meaning hardware and software sold directly consumers. MS for the most part makes software sold to OEMs and businesses. So when Apple announces a new computer, they can show the press and the consumers said product. MS releases new software, it's meant for OEMs or businesses. But they can't really show the mainstream press the product without their hardware partner's help. And it's harder to show off software to a consumer in general. For example, MS is working on Exchange 2010. Well to show it off they need a computer. If they pick HP as the computer company, Dell will be pissed and vice versa. After that's all said and done, how many consumers are really interested? Almost none. Businesses will be interested so why should the mainstream press care about Exchange 2010?.

      For MS products like Zune and Xbox, MS does get a lot of coverage. Unfortunately some of it has been on the negative side with Xbox 360's hardware issues and the Zune New Year's meltdown. It doesn't help your image when your products are shown to have major problems.

      I don't remember a single mainstream, non tech-press, story on the Zune launch, for example.

      What are you talking about? Everyone covered it including CNN. Currently Zune has a 4% marketshare so should the mainstream press cover it or the 70+% marketshare of Apple's iPod?

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    17. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen that phrase or anything like it used in the mainstream press since before the first iMac came out. Most of the articles and reports I see on Apple today see the company as FAR from "beleaguered." The only reports about Apple I've seen recently that were even remotely negative were some reports about their stock dropping due to Jobs illness, and some questions of whether Apple can survive without him.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    18. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      I would also add the gratuitous Apple computer shots in TV and movies. There's always these shots of someone working diligently, staring at their screen, with the Apple logo staring you in the face. There's never a Windows or Linux logo to be found on any computer ever, but everyone from SIGINT analysts in Transformers to CSI techies use Apples.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    19. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by MarkvW · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nothing good should be said about MS? That's kind of nuts.

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard and has created a standardized operating system so that developers can reach more people more easily. Computers are really ubiquitous now largely because of Microsoft. This ubiquity has resulted in lower prices and more variety.

      Maybe MS has served its purpose and should soon become extinct. Time will tell. But dont' say that NOTHING good should be said about MS!

    20. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      And that makes them different from Apple how exactly?

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    21. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by russotto · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard

      That's not a service. We're stuck with the dancing bear of architectures because it may not dance well, but it dances to the Microsoft tune.

    22. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      Second to none? Have you ever tried using XCode and Interface Builder? I find VisualStudio bloated, slow and buggy.

            -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    23. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      1) Microsoft has the audacity to bundle-in a free media player with their OS, thus pissing off the EU
      2) ???
      3) Microsoft scoops up protesters in giant trash trucks and processes them into snack food.

      Yeah... that sounds reasonable to me.

    24. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by pohl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. And before Apple bought them, NeXT was almost entirely ignored by the trade rags. So was OS/2, and Be. Everything was framed as Apple-versus-MS, with MS being the "defacto standard". Apple was lucky to get a token mention as the only viable non-MS alternative.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    25. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      I've used XCode and Interface Builder, and I prefer Visual Studio. For three reasons, one almost entirely arbitrary:
      1) VS can be used to create web applications. Last I checked, XCode could only create desktop applications. Since I spend most of my time writing web applications, XCode is of practically no use to me.
      2) VS has much better data integration tools, including a nice built-right-in GUI database management tool, and LINQ. A friend of mine told me that LINQ makes database integration so easy, "it's almost like cheating." After using it, I have to agree.
      3) I don't like Objective-C. This is the arbitrary one. But with VS, I can pick my language, with XCode I'm stuck with the language Apple wants me to use.

    26. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dirty little secret: developers at Microsoft can install Visual Studio for free, but they prefer vim. I met a couple dozen contracting in Redmond and this was true of all of them.

    27. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      and we're not even stuck with that dancing bear - now we have another one, that's a bit fatter and doesn't dance too well, but it does have a fluffy pink tutu put on it.

    28. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      any language.... as long as its VB. or VB-with-curly-brackets. (ok they still have C++ support, but its definitely a 3rd class language to MS now)

      LINQ integration also makes database access so easy, you'd be forgiven for thinking you're writing well-thought out sql code. Besides, LINQ is deprecated in favour of Entity Framework, so good luck with future support for it.

      Visual Studio is good, but it has gotten a lot more bloated and slow and generally unresponsive to use. Visual Studio 6 (esp VC++ 6) was the pinnacle of their development efforts. Its a shame they couldn't make something as good as that without bloating it up. I wonder if I'll have to buy another 2Gig of RAM to use VS2010 when it comes out.

    29. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      There was a time you could walk into any newspaper or television newsroom in the country and not see anything BUT Apple computers.

      • Apple got there first
      • Building on the above, and much like with business apps on PC's, many creative apps were Mac-only or Mac-first
      • Superior color matching
      • Great multiple monitor support long before Microsoft managed it

      The press LOVES Apple. They slovenly follow every Apple product launch with almost rapturous attention

      And this would be different from the Windows 95/98/XP/Vista/XBox/Halo/Zune rollouts how, exactly? And as someone else pointed out, you missed the decade of "Beleaguered Apple is dying" stories in the 90's.

      Most of the positive press coverage I see about MS is either when they have a MAJOR launch (the 360, a new Halo game, etc.) or is related to Bill Gates' considerable charitable activities (which *deserves* to be covered and extolled, if nothing more than to encourage other rich guys to do it). Most of their stuff barely gets a nod.

      Crap, see above.

      I don't remember a single mainstream, non tech-press, story on the Zune launch, for example.

      Naturally, that would interfere with your storyline.

    30. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You mean like all the Dells you see on 24 and Smallville? Companies try go get their products placed in media, news at 11.

    31. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by EvolutionsPeak · · Score: 1

      Even if that were true, everyone loves the underdog/comeback story.

    32. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call their C++ support 3rd class to the other languages.

      You should look at the list of features added to the C++ compiler and debugger since VC6.
      The big compiler features that springs to mind are multithreaded compiling and profile-guided optimisation, but there are others.
      Not forgetting built-in support for OpenMP.
      Or the x86-64 Compiler and Debugger.

      Edit and Continue. OMG is this nice to have.
      I'm not sure whether VC6 allowed as complex expressions in the debugger as the modern VC++, e.g. calling user functions. I know VC++2003 couldn't understand casting something to a pointer to pointer to something, reacting with a "multiply what now?" error, but VC++2005 gets it.

      It's not like they can add new things to the standard library like they can with their own languages.

    33. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The ipod and OSX were both released in 2001. I think there is a bit of causation there. OS9 sucked hard compared to W2k; even 10.0 was pretty terrible (buggy as hell). The press had just about every reason to hate Macs in the late 90's and through the release of 10.1 (also in 2001, but you got a freebie upgrade on that one, IIRC... again cuz 10.0 sucked).

      Yup, what really hurt Apple was their belief that Windows was only just catching up. What ended up happening is that Apple did not innovate in the right places and let Microsoft pass by. The product line was equally confusing with model numbers that didn't mean anything to anyone.

      In many ways I feel Gil Amelio made the right choice of purchasing NeXT instead of Be, since I suspect this would have caused Apple to become a software only company. In purchasing NeXT Apple got Steve Jobs, someone who IMHO, who had a vision (not the spiritual one) of where things should be going. When Steve Jobs came on board he brought OpenStep, a system that was ahead of it time, but not really finding itself a market until it became the core of MacOS X. He also simplified the product line into a range that people could understand. This is something I don't see with companies like Dell, who offer such a large range of computers and models that you are left scratching your head as to which is the right for you.

      For me what really made me understand Steve Jobs was a Wired Interview which was done back in the 1990s, and I believe is a must read. He believed in simplicity and the fact the computers should be present but not visible, to the point where you don't even think of what you are using as a computer.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    34. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This, Sir, was a truly mind-boggling post. So insightful it even sounds funny.

    35. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Right. In fact, it's hard not to see the connection between the return of Steve Jobs and the comeback of Apple. They spent a couple decades sitting on old designs and old technology, settling for an ever-shrinking design market, a market that was in the process of moving to Windows because Photoshop really runs on either platform. It's no wonder that the press and consumers weren't interested in Apple.

      Then Jobs comes back, and you get a bunch of colorful computer designs that catches the media's attention. It kind of ushered out the era of the beige box. After years of jumping from one "next generation" operating system to another, never actually finishing anything, they push a new OS out the door based on an OS from Jobs's old company. Then they release the iPod, which was supposedly something Jobs pushed for himself.

      Each of these things took a couple years of development before they were really refined, but each represented a turning point for Apple. They overhauled their designs, began using technically superior products (superior at least to their older products), and entered new markets. It's not without reason that their image in the media turned around.

    36. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      Nothing good should be said about MS? That's kind of nuts.

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard and has created a standardized operating system so that developers can reach more people more easily. Computers are really ubiquitous now largely because of Microsoft. This ubiquity has resulted in lower prices and more variety.

      Maybe MS has served its purpose and should soon become extinct. Time will tell. But dont' say that NOTHING good should be said about MS!

      The x86 chipset, noticibly inferior to the to the 68K chips of the time. Thanks Microsoft for helping to kill off a superior architecture.

      They don't have a standard platform, they have an illegal monopoly platform. UNIX is built around a series of standards, providing for independent implementation of multiple compliant operating systems which allow for easy transport of compliant applications. Solaris, AIX, BSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, FreeBSD, HP-UX, and others. The standards that can even be reimplemented without permission, Linux.

      Affordable ubiquitous computers, perhaps you never heard of the C-64.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    37. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --I'm not an Apple fan; but I still think nothing good should be said about M$. The company is still getting nailed for illegal business practices like the price fixing scheme in Germany.

      Everything the company does is suspect, and part same old embrace, extend, and extinguish business model.--

      Isn't ITunes getting the same treatment from the EU? Apple is trying to do the same thing there.

      I would like to embrace the free software concept as in freedom to do what I want with it once I have bought it, got it open source, etc. Unfortunately, I can't find everything to make our businesses work that way.

      You are right, but no big companies seem trustworthy anymore either on this side of the Atlantic or your side of it.

    38. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by hoooocheymomma · · Score: 1

      I've not used XCode and Interface Builder. I guess I'm mainly comparing Visual Studio to the likes of Eclipse, which is buggier and (to me) seemingly bloatier. I fully agree that Visual Studio is slow as fuck to start up, but buggy? Taking into account all the functionality it has, and the fact that I have only run into a few really annoying bugs in visual studio, I'd say Visual Studio is remarkably unbuggy, especially coming from Microsoft.

      For me, whether I will be using visual studio is based on the question, "will the clunkiness of this suite be outweighed by all the fancy things it does for me automatically?" With the kind of work I have been doing lately, the answer has been no. I just need a lightweight editor that can support multiple documents, syntax highlighting, and good file system browsing. I use EditPlus.

      Still, I often miss the IntelliText, object browser, and the really good skeleton code VS generates for me.

    39. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing good should be said about MS? That's kind of nuts.

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard and has created a standardized operating system so that developers can reach more people more easily.

      ...I still think that's nothing good. The dominance of x86 has bound the entire computer industry to the fortunes of Intel and their armies of lawyers. A diversity of architectures had been frustrating to users, but made new ideas more feasible.

      Perhaps the recent trend to VMs could have happened earlier and in a more orderly fashion had there been no dominant architecture like x86.

    40. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you've never read 'beleaguered' attached to Apple in nearly every report in the 90s. Or the iPhone is no good for business users? Or this is the year iPods get owned by the latest iPod-killer. Or the increasing number of viruses attacking Macs and they are worse off than Vista in terms of security. CanSecWest - Mac pwnage in 10 seconds.

      Do you consider these reports a love fest for Apple?

      You're just reading what you seek to make this point. Are you some kind of fanboi?

    41. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      If you are talking purely about the code editor, then I'll grant you that it is useful. However, as an integrated debugger and inspector, it is slow and buggy. The debugger has a knack of crashing in spectacular ways (often bringing the entire computer to its knees) by the mere action of attempting to inspect memory locations or local objects.

      Personally, I find the editor too bloated and imposing, and the customization level lacking--sometimes I just want to write code in my own way and don't want so many bells and whistles. But that's a matter of opinion.

      I agree that Eclipse has been bloated and buggy in the past, but it has gotten better; much better. In any case, if your development experience in modern environments is using VisualStudio and Eclipse, then you are in a position to compare both, but hardly in a position to say that VisualStudio is "second to none". There are many other development tools out there that have much more to offer.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    42. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Draek · · Score: 1

      VB.NET is a stupified version of C# rather than the other way around, and C# has more in common with LISP than it does with the old Visual Basic, that is to say "not a fucking lot". It is, also, a kickass language which you should try before flaming it only to make Apple look better.

      And I'd like to know what part of Visual C++ makes it a "3rd class language" now, in your opinion, because I've seen nothing to support your argument. Yes, VS' language support may be inferior to that of Eclipse, for instance (which has plugins for pretty much anything these days), but it's certainly not as bad as you make it sound and I've yet to see convincing evidence that XCode is any better.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    43. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      It doesn't necessarily matter that x86 isn't the best - it matters that it's everywhere. As a developer, I don't want to have to worry about what hardware my customers are going to be using, I just want my software to work - that's what Microsoft did, they made sure their OS would work (for certain definitions of "work") on as wide a range of hardware as possible.

      OSX may be better than Windows in terms of stability, but I'd like to see how Apple would fare if they had to support the wide range of hardware that Microsoft has to support. I really doubt they'd be any better than MS.

      (And before anyone accuses me of being a Microsoft fanboi, I'll point out that I'm writing this post in Gentoo Linux...)

    44. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Most of the time on TV I see Dells with the Dell logo on the lid of the laptop covered by a nondescript sticker (the trained eye can still recognize the case as Dell's handiwork). Shows aren't going to advertise for a computer company for free; they'd take the sticker off if Dell would pay them...

    45. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by againjj · · Score: 1

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard[...].

      That was not a service. God, I wish some better chip had become the standard. Even Intel has tried to get rid of it without success.

    46. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      Actually VB.NET is a more fully featured version of C# (with things like XML literals, conditional exceptions, better namespace support, and so on), but it shows the hype about C# that no-one cares to know otherwise.

      I say C++ is a third class language now simply because most of the VS development effort has been heavily geared towards managed code. VC almost seems like they have to support it, but wish they didn't. I'm sure people at MS would like to drop any language not completely reliant on .NET (and by implication - Windows), but .NET was written in C++, and there's a lot of legacy code that needs supporting, so they're keeping it for the ride.

      I know they'd added TR1 and MFC improvements, which is always welcome, but that's just last year, other than that, we'd seen minor changes to the language and system compared to the .NET languages.

      Sure, I'm making it sound worse than it is, most VC devs (of which I am one) are happy with the support in VS, but that's not going to help when the number of VC devs continues to drop as they are migrated towards almost exclusively C# development.

    47. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing good should be said about MS? That's kind of nuts.

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers. Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard and has created a standardized operating system so that developers can reach more people more easily. Computers are really ubiquitous now largely because of Microsoft. This ubiquity has resulted in lower prices and more variety.

      Maybe MS has served its purpose and should soon become extinct. Time will tell. But dont' say that NOTHING good should be said about MS!

      I am afraid that we are not in the luxery position to label Microsofts actions in it's past existence, especially regarding the pushing of X86 and perhaps it's past dominance in gui/os technology as "good".

      There has to be something say about Microsoft, but judging it good or bad still is a pretty subjective statement. I'd vote bad, but alas the jury is still out on this one.

    48. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing good should be said about MS? That's kind of nuts.

      Yes it is.

      MS has performed a TREMENDOUS service to MANY of those who like to use computers.

      No they have not. They have in general set the development of computer science back about 15 years.

      Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard

      An inferior design has become standard? Thanks a lot.

      and has created a standardized operating system so that developers can reach more people more easily.

      They rammed through a hacked up pile that they did not even develop. Before DOS, Digital Research had CP/M-86 which was DOS-like, M/PM which was a preemptively multitasking multiuser CP/M. There were already CP/M compatible OSes with memory protection and virtual memory on the few systems that had memory management hardware. GEOS was all set to run on CP/M and MP/M giving a nice GUI on top of this multitasking multiuser system (this was also ported to DOS). So, a multitasking, multiuser, virtual memory-supporting OS, with a GUI, and standardized --without Microsoft. Digital Research simply made a severe blunder in negotiations with IBM for supplying an OS for the IBM PC, and Microsoft outmaneuvered them (despite not even having an OS yet! They bought it from some guy for a 1-time $50,000 fee!) And this is ignoring UNIX, which still would have developed in parallel, given the UNIX market was pretty seperate from the PC market for so long.

      Computers are really ubiquitous now largely because of Microsoft.

      Nope. See the above.

      This ubiquity has resulted in lower prices and more variety.

      You just argued a few sentences ago about standardizing on x86 -- that is LESS variety. Prices have lowered simply due to Moore's law and large-scale production.

      Maybe MS has served its purpose and should soon become extinct. Time will tell. But dont' say that NOTHING good should be said about MS!

      .....
              ^---(me not saying that.)

    49. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by xX5h1ll3l46hXx · · Score: 0

      The more companies branch out the more it bothers me, it doesn't seem to be enough that they're giants in their original field and squeeze off or buy out any competition, but they have to get their fingers on to even more things. Something needs to be done about them before we end up eating Microsoft brand breakfast cereal with Sony soy milk and Apple mixed berries.

    50. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bill Gates' quest to dominate has much helped the x86 chipset to become a standard...

      Which, of all CPU chips available at the time, had to be one of the absolute worst choices for a CPU architecture standard.

      Imagine if the money and time that went into improving the x86, had instead gone into improving the mips, or the 68000, or the arm, or the PPC. Two generations (and counting) of hardware developers would have had a lot fewer headaches and bizzare modes to contend with when bringing up a new piece of compatible hardware. Been there, done that, it basically costs one or two dedicated engineers just for designing and cross-checking the legacy stuff.

    51. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Just to ask a stupid question, can you even *write* a GUI OS X app using C++? I was under the impression it was Obj-only.

      It's goofy to claim C++ is a second-class citizen in VS when you can't even use it to create GUI apps in OS X. (Unless I'm mistaken.)

    52. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by dafing · · Score: 1
      while being ardently Mac, I can totally agree with your post.

      I do think that basically everything Microsoft has ever done has sucked, I'd like to hear a single KICK ASS product they have made. I have a PS3, I prefer it over an Xbox 360, but I can understand they have sold more 360s than PS3's in America. But, its not a whole revolution is it? People havnt started making products that look like Xbox, they dont start putting the letter 'X' in front of product names etc.

      Microsoft launches deserve as much attention as Apples, of course! However, M$ must at least put some effort into their products, make them WORTHY of peoples time! The Zune for example, you brought that up, I'll let you know that you basically cant get the Zune anywhere in the world except for America (and canada recently?). As a New Zealander, I'll go my entire life without seeing one probably. I thought about buying one from eBay, just to have one. When MS doesnt even sell their music device outside of one country, something the young people of the world should be begging for, what does that tell you? Probably that its not very good, or that Microsoft doesnt give a damn about the ENTIRE rest of the world.

      If you are American, and live in America, then I'm sure America seems important to you. But 300 odd million people out of 6 BILLION is peanuts. Its kinda like the amount of Apple users, sure Apple users are influential and game changing, like America, but they are a small piece of the pie, the rest of the world, and products, deserve coverage!

      --
      --- ...or a new slashdot signature. Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
    53. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, C# has a completely different lineage than VB.NET. And as the parent poster said, VB.NET was the result of a "C-sharpification" of VisualBasic, in order to move all those entrenched Windows developers using exclusively VB into the .NET platform. You see, .NET is an object oriented platform, while VisualBasic, up to that point, didn't even offer proper polymorphism or inheritance.

      The C# language was designed by the Anders Hejlsberg, the designer of other languages and compilers, such as Turbo Pascal, Object Pascal and Delphi. The language is based more on SmallTalk than on any other. Like Java, it has a C-ish syntax, but this is more an accident of history. Hejlsberg has also said that it also "borrows" liberally from Delphi, because he thought that things such as explicit virtual methods were done right in Delphi. If you've ever used Delphi, you'll recognize its influence immediately when you use C#; I know I did. It's one of the reasons it tends to resemble less of Java, contrary to what many think.

              -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    54. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by dzfoo · · Score: 1

      On a side note, its pleasing to meet a fellow EditPlus user. You, sir, are a man of taste.

                -dZ.

      --
      Carol vs. Ghost
      ...Can you save Christmas?
    55. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      They have in general set the development of computer science back about 15 years.

      I'll take "Ridiculous Hyperbole" for $1000, Alex.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    56. Re:Pro-MS press?!?!? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      My favorite was Jeff Goldblum giving the aliens a virus from his Apple laptop in "Independence Day." Good thing aliens use Macs!

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  5. I'm a Linux user... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and that's not what I'm scratching.

    1. Re:I'm a Linux user... by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

      And it's not "Linux users everywhere...."

      It's "Linux users in their Mom's basement...."

      (Yes, I'm a Linux user, and yes, I own my own house.
      It's a joke, mods.....)

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
    2. Re:I'm a Linux user... by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Oh, so your mom lives upstairs?

      (also a joke, mods...)

    3. Re:I'm a Linux user... by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

      Neckbeard getting a bit itchy?

    4. Re:I'm a Linux user... by The+Redster! · · Score: 1

      He owns his own house, but doesn't live in it!

    5. Re:I'm a Linux user... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope but the palm beard is =/

    6. Re:I'm a Linux user... by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

      D'oh!!

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
  6. Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads.

    No, no we are not. We're used to this shit from Ballmer and Co. Surprised that they turned their sites on Apple with it?

    No, I've bitched about this before and I'm sick of hearing about "hidden costs" that you don't pay when you install Linux or OSX or whatever but that you pay later. Or the cost to train to a new OS being a "hidden" cost because Microsoft starts these reports with the assumption that everyone already knows Windows XP.

    I'm not scratching my head, I'm sick of it. And I hope that this finally causes people to realize that you can only assume the price of what you initially pay for software because they all have flaws and problems down the line. It's a futile exercise to try to itemize that in a cost list because--surprise surprise--you're often subjective and biased when you do it!

    Microsoft conveniently ignores these "comprehensive" reports when they ask you to upgrade to Vista despite all the retraining and migration problems you will have.

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1

      "Or the cost to train to a new OS being a "hidden" cost because Microsoft starts these reports with the assumption that everyone already knows Windows XP."

      Actually this is an unfortunate fact, and I'm fine with them starting with the assumption that almost everyone lacks a basic understanding of sound computing principles. This is actually quite true, and there absolutely will be a cost moving from Windows to Linux, which people with a clue call an investment. Having a solid, virus free, secure system run by people with a clue is what we call the ROI. Please, Please, Please big bad Bill! Don't throw me into the Linux briar patch!

      --
      Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    2. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by remmelt · · Score: 1

      Surprised that they turned their sites on Apple with it?

      I think I saw what you did there, but I'm not sure.

    3. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by malkien · · Score: 1

      Surprised that they turned their sites on Apple with it?

      are you telling me all their webservers now redirect to apple.com?

    4. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      I think learning curve for a new OS has dropped dramatically. If you can use windows you can use pretty much any other major GUI based operating system out there with little learning curve.

      In some cases you give up windows habits altogether. For example my mother switched from windows to a mac mini. Within two days she gave up on the concept of directories/folders. Instead uses a combination of coverflow and spotlight to find her stuff.

    5. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Well, you're correct that almost everyone lacks a basic understanding of sound computing principles. There was a brief window where computer users had to be competent, and most users were. Now everybody has one and there is practically no need to know anything but where the on switch is.

      Linux is great, but operating systems mean so little today. They all "just work" for the end user. Sure, some do things easier than others, but there's no perfect OS. As part of the computer literate we (you and I) expect more from computers than 95% of people. Principally, we expect them to be manageable. Everybody else just wants to be able to use the same 10 programs that everyone else uses so that they can exchange files. The issue is that 8 of those programs don't exist on Linux and 5 don't exist on Mac. You can't apt-get msoffice (you can add a "thank God" at this point, if you like), or get AutoCAD to run in OSX. Sure OOo is availble, but try to open a .doc file with anything but text and you're likely to see something different than the sender created. You can speak of open formats and better solutions, but the fact exists that most of the world uses stuff that's built based on an installed base of windows-centric computing.

      Worse, it's unlikely to change anytime soon. Businesses use Windows, so that's what the workforce knows. They're the ones who buy the home computers, and familiar is easy. We play with other OSes to do different things, but it's one of our hobbies - we consciously devote time to it. Most people don't, and don't care. Businesses are about profit, and retraining a workforce - and every new employee - is an expense (investment, if you will) that does not normally pay for itself. In 6 years we've never had a virus related issue, and we have no full time IT person (I spend 2 hours a month - at most - managing a Windows server and 4 workstations). It would take close to 60 hours for each employee to fully train them on a mac or linux NOT including switching our core business software, which would cost more than $50,000 just for new licenses. I would probably end up "investing" close to 2-3 years of profit to switch. And I'd still have to manage the servers. If I cut my IT time by 75%, which is pretty unlikely at 2h/month, I'd save less than $1,000 a year in direct expenses, and less than $2000 in opportunity cost.

      The numbers just aren't there. And there are very few businesses which are so generic as to use no software which runs natively under windows. There are some where Mac is the standard, too, of course, and they would have just as hard a time switching to Windows or Linux.

      As for the "Vista tax," most of us aren't paying it. Changing paradigms just isn't generally profitable for businesses who are working efficiently already. MS has found that out. We're all still on XP, and plan to be for the foreseeable future. Thanks to the pull Dell has with MS, and their eye towards business, we'll still have XP for at least another year on new machines. And you didn't hear it from me, but after that we'll probably keep the old XP install discs around. With Dell BIOS, they load just fine.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    6. Re:Where's the "Vista Tax" Report? by adiposity · · Score: 1

      Hidden costs are a real thing, though perhaps the name choice isn't so great. "TCO," though, makes sense.

      The "hidden cost" of upgrading to Vista is huge for my company. Right now we estimate $150,000 just to upgrade our ERP system to a version that works on Vista instead of XP (we are a fairly small company). So, not only does the "hidden" cost matter, it applies to all systems.

      For Microsoft to suggest that they are exempt from other costs while Apple is not, is disingenuous, of course.

      -Dan

  7. The bashwagon by gcnaddict · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm pretty sure just about every self-minded tech journalist/blogger/twitterer/etc. would jump on the Microsoft bashwagon if it makes him/her look cool and worthwhile.

    It doesn't matter if everyone bashes Microsoft. Apple is also a design firm, hence the Apple tax on the Apple logo. It's like paying 300 for a pair of Gucci sunglasses: they're damned good for your eyes but 250 dollars of it is a tax on design.

    --
    Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
    1. Re:The bashwagon by IBBoard · · Score: 1

      I think $250 of it is a tax on the brand rather than the design. The design tax would be around the $30-$40 mark, because they're nicer* than some cheap $20 pair you can pick up in a supermarket.

      Disclaimer: I don't know how much supermarket sunglasses are exactly, especially not in dollars. I know they're cheap in the UK if you buy the cheap plastic things, but it has been ages since I even bought any of those given the weather we have over here!

      * Sometimes, although some "fashionable" items are completely hideous and only sell because some people are suckered in by "it is fashionable" and "it has a big label on it"

    2. Re:The bashwagon by nine-times · · Score: 1

      It's like paying 300 for a pair of Gucci sunglasses: they're damned good for your eyes but 250 dollars of it is a tax on design.

      That's not that great a metaphor, considering the prices for Apple products really aren't usually that far out of whack. It'd be more like if the cheapest Apple-brand sunglasses were $50, and they were pretty similar to a Dell-brand pair that was $45 and also similar to a Dell-brand pair that was $60, except that the Apple-brand pair offered slightly better UV-A protection and slightly worse UV-B protection, and were considered more stylish.

      But you could also buy a pair of Dell-brand sunglasses for $10 that were made of cheap plastic, and though the UV protection was ok, they were a little too dark and sometimes made it hard to see. Apple just didn't offer a $10 pair of glasses.

      I think that is a metaphor that's a little more apropriate.

      I know we geeks have a tendency to assume that anything that's "cool" must also suck, because we aren't cool, but... you know... we're all awesome. But if you keep an open mind, you'll realize that, every now and then, when people are all jumping on the bandwagon, it's because that wagon is headed in the right direction.

  8. Microsoft is doing it wrong by mc1138 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On a high end window's machine you can easily spend just as much. That being said, Apple's generally are more expensive, but that being said, is it really a wise move for Microsoft to point this out? Shouldn't they just get some comedians to point out how Apple is full of chic jerks and PC's are where real computing is done?

    1. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by David+Gerard · · Score: 1

      Microsoft (NASDAQ: MNPLY) has hired comedian Bob Hope to anchor a $300 million advertising campaign for its struggling Windows Vista franchise.

      The software maker is desperate to counter popular Apple ads that personify PCs as un-"hep" and not "with it," while portraying Apple's Macintosh as the "happening scene."

      "We felt that resurrecting Bob from the dead and putting him in front of our campaign was just the way to upgrade Vista's, I mean 7's, image. Yowsa yowsa yowsa!" said Kevin Johnson, the fourth executive to be in charge of the development of Vista^WWindows 7, just before he quit this morning. "It was also cheaper and easier than actually fixing Vista."

      "Braaainnns," said Mr Hope.

      Few businesses have upgraded to Vista from Windows XP, citing Vista's cost, incompatibility with older software and hardware and intrusive security features. And twenty years' pent-up hatred of Microsoft.

      The campaign was created by Crispin Porter + Bogusky, whose entire workflow runs on Macs.

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    2. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't they just get some comedians to point out how Apple is full of chic jerks and PC's are where real computing is done?"

      Depends on how you define "real computing". It is becoming more apparent that more security professionals are using Macs. As someone who has used and managed Linux, I bought a Mac because it does the job I need it to do without the maintenance my PC needs or the tweaking that my Linux boxes needed.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    3. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't they just get some comedians to point out how Apple is full of chic jerks and Windows PC's are just regular jerks?

    4. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by binarylarry · · Score: 1

      You should try an easy distro like Ubuntu.

      It's as easy as a Mac, if not easier. This is especially true if you buy the hardware with Ubuntu preinstalled from someone like Dell:

      http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetails.aspx/xpsnb_m1530?c=us&l=en&s=dhs&cs=19&~oid=us~en~29~linux_2~~

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    5. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easily half of the laptops I've seen at PyCon, DefCon and HOPE for the last several years have been Apples. Some of those might have been running Windows or Linux, I don't know.

    6. Re:Microsoft is doing it wrong by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Ubuntu is really nice for a desktop but by the time I already purchased a Mac. Also I need Linux more as server than a desktop so I use Fedora. From my Mac I can ssh into my Linux and manage them whereas I can't do the opposite.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  9. Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads..."

    trying to figure out how to install their word processor on the newest ubuntu distro

  10. psuedo capitalism sucking the life out of US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's really just a sort of caste system. do we really need any more phony payper billionerrors?

  11. How about those hidden linux taxes? by 2.7182 · · Score: 5, Funny

    You have to admit, they are really well hidden.

    1. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They are quickly revealed to you post install, if your time is worth anything that is.

    2. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by robbrit · · Score: 1

      You've obviously never tried to install Gentoo.

    3. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by GNUbuntu · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm still compiling the system you insensitive clod!

    4. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by pentalive · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Several Linux distributions work just fine just as installed. They don't need anything beyond what you might have to do if you were installing windows fresh.

      We Linux users like to 'customize' but its not required.

      My time is worth $25 to $30 an hour, but I can adjust, download, customize and registry edit just as much on Windows as I can on Linux.

    5. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by ZarathustraDK · · Score: 2, Funny

      They are quickly revealed to you post install, if your time is worth anything that is.

      ? Is he talking about the time you waste post-install where you're banging your hot wife instead of spending time swapping app-cd's, hunting .exe's on the net and installing drivers for your peripherals like on windows?

      Yeah, analogue stuff like that is bothersome.

      --
      If you quote this signature there'll be 72 copies of Windows ME waiting for you in Heaven.
    6. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry...posted overrated incorrectly...meant for +1 funny.

    7. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by corsec67 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The ease of installing software on many Linux distributions shouldn't be overrated.

      If I want to install OpenOffice, Gimp, Pidgin, Blender, Thunderbird, Emacs, VI, Akregator, GimageViewer, Gnome Terminal, etc. it is easy to do that in one command in linux, but doing that in Windows, even with all of the specified software packages being open source is much more time consuming.

      sudo apt-get install openoffice gimp pidgin blender mozilla-thunderbird emacs vi akregator gimageview gnome-terminal

      Is tons easier than going to 10 different websites, downloading at least 10 install packages, installing all of them, etc. And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
    8. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by wisty · · Score: 2, Funny

      Including the time it takes, Linux and Mac are just better.

      If you use a computer for testing out new libraries / frameworks / etc, Linux is a lot easier to use. apt-get install is a real time saver. I just don't have the time to tinker on Windows - that's for OS geeks, not people who want to get stuff done.

      If you just surf the web, Mac is better, but it really doesn't matter. Linux PPPOE was a bit behind (on Dapper Drake, maybe it's improved) which is a big initial cost, but the stability and lack of viruses pay off in the long term.

    9. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Richy_T · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Hmm, given that there *is* a lot of open source software available for Windows, I'm surprised someone hasn't come up with something like apt-get for it (or maybe even ported apt).

      Unless anyone knows differently.

    10. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Richy_T · · Score: 2, Informative

      I should add that I am aware of the Cygwin setup utility. But that is fairly narrow in scope.

    11. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by jeffeb3 · · Score: 1

      I can adjust, download, customize and registry edit just as much on Windows as I can on Linux.

      Then your time should be worth more than $25 to $30 an hour.

    12. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      there are some, but none is as good as apt.
      GetIt http://www.puchisoft.com/GetIt/ for example.

    13. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by TheOtherChimeraTwin · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, but there does seem to be a linux tax. Look at Dell's Ubuntu notebook offerings:

      • XPS M1530n for $974
      • XPS M1330n for $849

      (I'm leaving out the Mini 9n because it is a netbook with a tiny keyboard.) The cheapest Windows XPS M1530 is $899, and the Windows M1330 is $749. More importantly, I can get a Inspiron 15 laptop for $399. Less than HALF the cost of the cheapest Ubuntu notebook. (Never mind the specs here, I'm just looking for a cheap box with a real keyboard.)

      Let's look at system76 instead. Their cheapest notebook is a Darter Ultra for $739.

      Excluding netbooks, if I want a cheap notebook right now, the least expensive option is to buy a Windows notebook and then install Linux!

    14. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but being locked into an old version of a program unless you are willing to do double the work sucks.

      Is it that difficult to update programs in the repos?

    15. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then stop using Gentoo and switch to Ubuntu.

    16. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vux984 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The ease of installing software on many Linux distributions shouldn't be overrated.

      Then please don't.

      If I want to install OpenOffice...
      it is easy to do that in one command in linux

      It wasn't for me, just a few months ago. I wanted OO3, but all that was in the repository was OO2. So I had to add some obscure repository and key first. It wasn't particularly hard... but it was about on par with editing the windows registry. And I had to follow some online instructions on what exactly I needed to put in there.

      Is tons easier than going to 10 different websites, downloading at least 10 install packages, installing all of them, etc.

      No. apt-get is more efficient. Going to a website, downloading the program, and double clicking to install isn't harder, its just time consuming.

      And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      These days most of them just prompt when they want to update. Again its not hard, its mostly just annoying. And the ones that don't auto-update simply require another visit to the website from time to time, or that you join a mailing list... its not hard... but yeah, its annoying and less efficient.

      That said, if I don't want to install updates to something, most (but not all) programs have a simple checkbox to turn of auto updating. If I want to 'pin' something in linux, its not nearly so simple.

    17. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by quisxt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's great, but unfortunately the following doesn't work, and it's what many users seems to think they want

      apt-get install MSOffice Photoshop WorldOfWarcraft

      Even something like Google Earth for Linux can't be "apt-gotten," unless that has changed in the past few months.

    18. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roger L. Kay, President
      Endpoint Technologies Associates, Inc.
      Phone: (508) 720-3469
      Mobile: (508) 314-4443
      k@ndpta.com

    19. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Jaysyn · · Score: 3, Informative

      Looks like it's being worked on.

      windows-get.sourceforge.net

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    20. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by ThrowAwaySociety · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The ease of installing software on many Linux distributions shouldn't be overrated.

      If I want to install OpenOffice, Gimp, Pidgin, Blender, Thunderbird, Emacs, VI, Akregator, GimageViewer, Gnome Terminal, etc. it is easy to do that in one command in linux, but doing that in Windows, even with all of the specified software packages being open source is much more time consuming.

      sudo apt-get install openoffice gimp pidgin blender mozilla-thunderbird emacs vi akregator gimageview gnome-terminal

      Is tons easier than going to 10 different websites, downloading at least 10 install packages, installing all of them, etc. And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      You're confusing "cheap," "efficient," and "quick" with "easy."

      The average (wo)man-on-the-street would find it much easier to drive to Best Buy, ask the blueshirt, "What's a good program to write up reports in?," pick the MSOffice box, find another blueshirt, ask, "What's a good program to use with my digital camera?," pick up the Photoshop Elements box, pay the blueshirt at the counter, pay for the extended warranty, drive home, stick in the CDs, and click through the GUI installers! Oh, yeah, and then click through the automatic updaters that run immediately afterwards.

      Only if you bring money (err, "taxes," I guess we call it now) into the equation does it become "easier" for the average Joe to learn how to use apt. (Much less figure out why they have to type "sudo" first.)

    21. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The thing about it is, you have to be willing to maintain a repository yourself. Given that if it works on an earlier version of windows, there is an extremely high likelihood of it working on a later version (unlike in linux where you do sometimes need a recompile or even patches) there is less motivation to store everything in a centralized location. I can understand this viewpoint, since, what is the point in maintaining a centralized repository of programs when a [specifically compiled] repository isn't necessary to install a program.
      To me, the argument about ease of installation has always been about making lemonade from the huge lemon that software compiled for one distribution isn't guaranteed to work on a different one, or even a previous version of the same. On the windows side however (at least from my own anecdotal experience) it is trivially easy to compile things to run on previous versions of windows, within reason. Case in point, being firefox, which I think until recently supported all the way back to Win 98.

    22. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Mishotaki · · Score: 1

      tons easier than going to 10 different websites, downloading at least 10 install packages, installing all of them, etc. And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      really? i find it less boring to be visiting web pages while the first one is downloading than just wait in front of it because your internet connection is maxed out by downloading 10 different programs at the same time...

    23. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      And whoever decided that the M1330n was a good idea is a moron. I bought one, and half the stuff doesn't work, or work correctly out of the box.
      Cases in point:
      - no microphone array
      - no fprint reader (and at the time I got mine, the recommended solution was known to break gksudo in certain cases)
      - wireless that can't connect to WEP with 8021x authentication, which incidentally, is worse than the previous notebook I had which used a broadcom wifi chipset. (OMG Broadcom works better?)
      Dell still doesn't respect linux even though they have a linux tab, it was easier and more functional for me to just buy vista than to fight with their out of the box config and it was depressing as hell to think that Vista actually works better than something.

    24. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You just lost the regular market when you mentioned "command".

    25. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apt-get is more efficient. Going to a website, downloading the program, and double clicking to install isn't harder, its just time consuming.

      For me, more time-consuming and more steps is harder.

      And having much of the big stuff pre-installed right from my Ubuntu CD is even easier.

      These days most of them just prompt when they want to update. Again its not hard, its mostly just annoying.

      I hate that. "Java needs to update. Java is installing its own update manager in your system tray. OpenOffice needs to update. etc etc etc" The annoyance should count for something.

      It seems like we mostly agree about stuff. But to me, more steps and more annoying equals not easier, that is, harder. So I think it is fair to say that the Windows app situation is "harder" than Linux. It's really one of the big wins of a good Linux distro like Ubuntu.

    26. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      On Ubuntu (and probably most other GNOME based systems), Applications->Add/Remove...->Check the boxes for the software you want->Hit Apply->Give your password->???->Profit!

      --
      $ make available
    27. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      if you want to pin something in linux just uncheck the update checkbox in update manager
      thats not hard is it.

    28. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      average Joe to learn how to use apt. (Much less figure out why they have to type "sudo" first.)

      I'm using Kubuntu. I can click the K menu, click Applications, and click Add/Remove Programs. Adept loads, and I can browse all the available software in a GUI and choose what I want.

      My dumb-as-shit flatmate figured this out herself, and also figured out the package manager GUI thing on her Linux EEE PC.

    29. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      @vux984: "It wasn't for me..." (with regard to installing openoffice)

      Odd, open office usually just comes with most distributions. If that's not the case, then stick to distros that have it. So that introduces one little bit of work, the research necessary to determine which distro is right for you. Not all that hard, really. Certainly easier than doing the work to determine why a driver isn't working with your shiny, new vista rig.

      I just can't see how upgrading or installing anything in Windows is easier than "apt-get install X...", and I've done my share of app installs on Windows.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    30. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      At least with apt most of your upgrading prompts are centralized. Also, pinning can be done from Synaptic package manager: choose your package, then go (in the menu bar) Package->"Lock version" ("Force version..." does something too, but I cannot get the manual to explain it in a manner consistent with reality.)

      --
      $ make available
    31. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by sponga · · Score: 0, Troll

      Cause Windows users go to places like Majorgeeks.com and get the Top10 list of software that everyone usually needs, what is this myth that Windows users go searching long and far for software and that it is a time consuming OS.

      Nobody wants to type in commands to get their software when you click to install, anyways I would have to go get the special Open-source definition book to get what the words mean in their relationship to what they actually do. Is gimp gonna make my software act like a gimp? Does anyone actually still use IM anymore?
      Anyways, you really only need K-lite coded package and getfirefox.com; I think Google is kind of the apt-get equivalent to what Linux has. Click, double-click, click Yes, click Next, click Finish. That was so painful and time consuming?

      Automatic updates come with a lot of this software or you can get a program like Sumo which will search all your programs for updates, your average user behavior doesn't give a shit anyways and will run the old version forever.

      Has anybody used Windows around here lately in the last 7-10 years?

    32. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      They don't need the command line at all in GNOME, let alone having to figure out sudo.

      --
      $ make available
    33. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      Ditto for Windows. I use both and have been frustrated by both. Running a dual video card setup Linux (Ubuntu) often craps out when configuring the display (need to manually edit Xorg.conf) On the other hand I've had Windows crap out because a single service got corrupted e.g. IIS's configuration got corrupted (can't uninstall / reinstall IIS - get a 1053 error on other services - windows installer service dead). With an in-place reinstall borking the entire thing coupled with a wipe and new install - the new install ending with a ran out of activation error. Not exactly user friendly Both have their pro's and con's. Out of the box windows 'just works' far better (binary drivers, multiple displays whatever). On the other hand if anything does go wrong good luck ever figuring it out SOP seems to be to wipe and reinstall it

    34. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Even something like Google Earth for Linux can't be "apt-gotten," unless that has changed in the past few months."

      Well, you could always try:

      emerge googleearth

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    35. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you're comparing a terminal to a gui. Terminals are by design more powerful than guis
      GUI's however, are far more intuitive to use.

      GUI to GUI, there's not really a difference between Windows and Linux as far as installing any given 10 apps.

    36. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the tip!

    37. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by gringofrijolero · · Score: 1
      --
      Todos mis movimientos están friamente calculados
    38. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      I can't answer for apt-get but yum is simple, just add the package you want ignored to the "exclude" line in your repo conf file. I'm sure apt-get is just as easy.

      This assumes you want the command line instead of the GUIs.

      Ok, So my "don't be so damn lazy" conscience got me this time... look into pinning a package.

    39. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 1

      the problem is that non power users are afraid of the command line. (maybe with good reason, mistakes can be v damaging). They are very, very unfamiliar with it, certainly. So it's better for them to click on a link than risk "breaking their computer".

    40. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Tweenk · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I want to 'pin' something in linux, its not nearly so simple.

      Go to Synaptic, select the package to "pin", and then select Package->Lock Version

      --
      Those who would give up liberty to obtain working drivers, deserve neither liberty nor working drivers.
    41. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by kokojie · · Score: 0

      Look, no typical user want to remember AND actually type that to install software. They just want to click. This is why we no longer use DOS.

    42. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Tweenk · · Score: 3, Informative

      (unlike in linux where you do sometimes need a recompile or even patches)

      You need recompiles, because:
      1. When a Linux shared library changes its functionality (even if it's still ABI-compatible), it changes its DLL name. That's actually good.
      2. Linux apps never ship with all the libraries they use; those are expected to be provided by the system.
      3. Because of point 2, every app needs to use the same shared library version.

      You can create Linux binaries that don't need recompiles by linking statically, or by shipping your own shared libs (like everyone does on Windows); using repos works much better though.

      --
      Those who would give up liberty to obtain working drivers, deserve neither liberty nor working drivers.
    43. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Odd, open office usually just comes with most distributions. If that's not the case, then stick to distros that have it.

      It did come with it (ubuntu). Unfortunately it came with OO2 (this was some months ago). But OO3 had already been released and was readily available, and I wanted it.

      Certainly easier than doing the work to determine why a driver isn't working with your shiny, new vista rig.

      I've had my share of Linux driver issues.

      My current Ubuntu laptop won't reconnect to the wifi when I when it wakes from sleep unless I manually tell it to. And even then it takes like 30 seconds...to get an ip address and connect. At least this version remembers the WPA2 password. I couldn't even get WPA2 working properly with dapper drake, a year or so ago.

      And sometimes (about once a month) X just locks up; and I have to ctrl-alt-backspace to restart X.

    44. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by daybot · · Score: 1

      Unless anyone knows differently.

      It's called VMware...

      Couldn't resist!

    45. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      I can't answer for apt-get but yum is simple, just add the package you want ignored to the "exclude" line in your repo conf file. I'm sure apt-get is just as easy.

      Manually editing a config file is precisely the sort of thing I really shouldn't need to do. I don't mind doing it, and for scripting etc, its good that it can be done... but its not something I want to walk someone through over the phone.

      But apparently, some of the gui package managers do now make it simple so I misspoke on that issue.

    46. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      They are quickly revealed to you post install, if your time is worth anything that is.

      As they are with all of the operating systems if you don't have a clue what your are doing and you attempt to perform the installation yourself. Normally when you don't have a clue and you believe your time is more valuable than the cost of learning then you purchase a pre-installed system, whether it is OSX, Windows, Solaris, linux, or any other operating system.

      In regards to the report, its mostly BS. The so called $3,367 Apple tax over five years is not hidden, its in the advertised price and customers knowingly pay it.

      The problem with the report, $1,232 of so called hidden tax is in software purchases and yet none are listed in the cost of the Windows box. Yeah I know, the assumption is that the software is already purchased for the Windows box, that is a lame argument, I've seen Microsoft's revenue numbers for their office software, its a poor assumption that you will never need to buy software for Windows, in fact its absolutely ludicrous.

      Then there is another $2,983 of so called hidden taxes which are in the price difference of the laptop and desktop purchase. Again, this is not hidden, its in the price and the customer knows they are paying it.

      In the end if you remove the idiocy of the software cost and the up front known extra expense you are left with only $384 over five years of what somebody may consider a hidden tax due to higher priced Apple hardware that may be purchased in the future.

      And now for the true hidden tax that both corporations are guilty of, the manufacturing costs to reproduce software is virtually $0, the price both companies charge for their software licensing are outrageously high and in some cases exceed $100 per license. The result, check the SEC filings for these companies and you'll find gross profit margins in excess of 95% in their software licensing. There is your hidden tax, and they both do it. Me, I'll stick with linux and open source applications where the customer isn't gouged with monopoly enforced taxes to support their fat gross margins. Of course my time is valuable, that is why I invested in an education to protect my interests from those of greedy MBAs who sell over priced and poorly developed software.

    47. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      I agree, it really sucks! apt-get update ; apt-get upgrade only takes a couple of minutes, I can't claim overtime because I had to wait for 3hrs of updates to come through.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    48. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if you're offering a job.

    49. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by umeboshi · · Score: 2, Informative

      For just installing software:

      http://wpkg.org/

      For installing windows over a network with applications and drivers preinstalled:
      http://unattended.sourceforge.net/

      I have yet to try wpkg, but I've been messing with unattended off and on for a while now, and it's pretty good. There are scripts that will automatically download most of the open source applications and place them in the "repository" you create on a samba share that also contains scripts that help install them automatically. The hard part is actually configuring windows from a script. For example:

      Enable Status and Address Bar In Explorer
      http://unattended.msfn.org/unattended.xp/view/registry/57/

      Change My Computer Name
      http://unattended.msfn.org/unattended.xp/view/registry/35/
      (here I can "read" the ascii, but I don't know where "20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D" is coming from.

      I run into similar problems when trying to make "details" the default view for directories in explorer. I don't have time to look that one up right now, but I had to create it by setting it manually, then doing a diff on the registry, but the config option was for "local user" and I still haven't found where to place it in the "local machine" section.

      But anyway, this is about the closest that I've seen to something that is similar to apt for windows. BTW, even though unattended is for installing windows, you can use it to just install applications, bypassing the installation routine.

    50. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a project for that, I remember seeing at some school ACM site, UMN I think.

    51. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skeeto · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand how powerful package managers are. Or how they work. You should try one sometime.

    52. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or open Aptitude, find the package and hit =.

    53. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by ToastBusters · · Score: 1

      Interesting, I can install Linux fully configured in less than an hour these days, most of that time is waiting, while it takes me all day to install Windows because I have to hunt for drivers (typically without network support so I need two computers)

      Your statement used to be true, it's not any more. Now it's the reverse. I use Linux now BECAUSE my time is valuable, and Linux just works out of the box. Tweaking is completely unnecessary, but remains an option if you are the type that likes that kind of stuff.

    54. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by blitzkrieg3 · · Score: 1

      Portage for windows perhaps?

    55. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 1, Informative

      Explain to me why requiring a re-compile of an application that depends on a newer ABI-compatible shared object is a good thing? That seems utterly pointless and renders ABI-compatibility pointless.

    56. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by swillden · · Score: 1

      It wasn't for me, just a few months ago. I wanted OO3, but all that was in the repository was OO2. So I had to add some obscure repository and key first. It wasn't particularly hard... but it was about on par with editing the windows registry. And I had to follow some online instructions on what exactly I needed to put in there.

      Not sure if it will be in Jaunty or not, but Ubuntu is working on a fix for that. They're implementing automatic addition of repositories so you'll just click a hyperlink and, after entering your password and seeing appropriate security warnings, the repository and supporting keys will be automatically added. I believe it will also be able to automatically kick off the installation of a specific package from that repository.

      So, we'll have one-click download and install, with automatic updates and all of the rest of the apt goodness.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    57. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Bert64 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Downloading manually is much harder...
      You have to search...
      You have to somehow verify that the site you found is a reputable source of the app and not a scam site (try searching for openoffice, there are scam versions out there).
      All of the sites need to be up, if the main site isn't up you might not be able to see a mirror list. If a site is down, you wont get that app.
      You have to wait for the downloads to complete because the next step requires manual intervention.

      You can also pin versions down, in gentoo you just edit the package.mask file to prevent the installation of newer versions, i imagine other systems have an equivalent... That said, most package repositories won't update versions, just apply bugfix patches to existing versions, so there is very little reason not to take the updates.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    58. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's great, but unfortunately the following doesn't work, and it's what many users seems to think they want

      apt-get install MSOffice Photoshop WorldOfWarcraft

      Even something like Google Earth for Linux can't be "apt-gotten," unless that has changed in the past few months.

      Why would a user try to install MS Windows programs in Linux (unless that program actually has a Linux version)?

      Simiarly, do new OS X users sit down at their shiny new Macbook Pro and try to install a bunch of Windows applications?

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    59. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by forgotten_my_nick · · Score: 1

      I have several windows/macs and linux machines.

      Of them...

      Pro
      - Linux is cheapest (even if you factor in your time costs).
      - Mac is the easiest to maintain
      - Windows still wins out for games.

      Con
      - Linux is the most annoying to get set up in for beginners. If it was as simple to maintain as OSX for an end user it would be the winner straight off.
      - Windows I seem to spend most my time fighting spyware or trying to figure out why it is suddenly running slowly.
      - The only problem with the mac so far is I didn't fully lock down an account and my son managed to temporarily trash machine (my fault really and very easy to recover from).

      I used to be just windows mainly but I moved full time over to Macs now and haven't looked back. For most of my PC 3D games collection I use parallels on the Mac. It isn't good for hard core gaming but grand for 90% of PC games I own and well I have a console for the rest.

      I know I come off as a mac fanboi (my initial reason for not getting a mac), but all I can say is use one for two weeks. Beyond games, I think you would be hard pressed to say anything bad about it (well price as well).

    60. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we use Linux you insensitive clod!

    61. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      win-get

      Bam! And the stain is gone.

      Wait, what?

    62. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      For the price of those apps, you could pay a geek to come to your house, choose apps and install them for you using apt...

      That said, you are confusing "easy" with "familiar"... If users were aware of how easy it was to use the gui based package managers in modern linux distros people would prefer them.
      You can read package descriptions to learn what they do, search for packages, search google for independent recommendations (much better than the blueshirt who is on commission), and perform the install all without spending any money or having to leave your chair... And because it's free, you can try multiple apps without any risk.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    63. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      No. apt-get is more efficient. Going to a website, downloading the program, and double clicking to install isn't harder, its just time consuming.

      Except that most modern Linux distros will just pop up with something that says, "You have updates, do you want me to install them?" and you hit "Ok" (or "yes" or whatever), and that's it. That's easier and more efficient then going to lots of different sites, downloading programs, and installing each of them. Plus, it's actually safer, because it's coming from a known repository.

    64. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vivaelamor · · Score: 1

      Why was this modded troll? I'm very pro-linux and I can see a well spoken point about usability here.

      Having said that, it is pretty easy for websites to provide .rpm and .deb files as well as relying on repositories (notwithstanding dependency issues).

      One thing that does annoy me about linux and installing programs is there is currently no simple way for a user to install programs locally rather than system-wide. It would be a very nice feature for those who run multi user setups, though a lot of work to implement. One for the ubuntu feature requests maybe.

    65. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      For the price of those apps, you could pay a geek to come to your house, choose apps and install them for you using apt...

      That said, you are confusing "easy" with "familiar"... If users were aware of how easy it was to use the gui based package managers in modern linux distros people would prefer them.
      You can read package descriptions to learn what they do, search for packages, search google for independent recommendations (much better than the blueshirt who is on commission), and perform the install all without spending any money or having to leave your chair... And because it's free, you can try multiple apps without any risk.

      However, this does work against linux sometimes... If someone has paid for something, they will be determined to get their money's worth and refuse to believe they wasted their money... As a result, they will be more willing to work around bugs and spend time learning an app. If they got something for free, it's a case of easy come easy go and they are more willing to discard it at the first sign of trouble.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    66. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by nine-times · · Score: 1

      And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      Yeah, I really don't know why Microsoft and Apple don't come up with a good package manager that would allow you do add repositories and do automated updates from a central OS app instead of having each app run their own little auto-update thingy.

    67. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least on Linux you are able to install it... I would like to install IE7 on NT and a 2000 systems could you please direct me to a HOWTO.

      NOTE: There are limitations on all systems some are not as difficult as others....

    68. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Grashnak · · Score: 3, Informative

      Why would a user try to install MS Windows programs in Linux (unless that program actually has a Linux version)?

      Congratulations on missing the point completely.

      --
      Life needs more saving throws.
    69. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Seeing as Linux has zero cost, Windows must therefore have a negative cost, effectively making it a punishment...

      That said, more likely it's just all the crapware that comes with the typical windows install, companies pay dell to include their crap. Perhaps the same could be done with linux...

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    70. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference with what you did was not that you installed it, but that you installed in a way to get automatic updates and just forget about it. You could have just downloaded the deb and installed it.

    71. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      You are forgetting that administration of a linux system is more involved, what you are paying for is the support in case you call for xxx reason and need someone to help you with something, preferable someone that knows linux....! This costs money, and the differences in pricing come from difficulty
      in running windows vs. running linux. Not everyone is good with linux, almost everyone knows how to move in windows!

    72. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have come up with it - the problem is that every software vendor has come up with their own version. Google has Updater, Adobe has their updater, Microsoft theres, etc. Goodluck getting them all the subscribe to giving up the power of controlling the update process for some third party tool. I think you would have to run and manage the updates list yourself and be a rogue re-distributor to do this properly, but in violation of everyones TOS.

    73. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      I'd say that if you're using the command line then editing a conf file is exactly what you want to be doing. Of course, if you're using a GUI, then there's not a problem.

    74. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by vux984 · · Score: 1

      The difference with what you did was not that you installed it, but that you installed in a way to get automatic updates and just forget about it. You could have just downloaded the deb and installed it.

      True. But that is exactly the same process the OP was complaining was 'too much work' on Windows. That sort of undermines any 'advantage' of linux.

    75. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like CygWin, you mean? It's been doing that for at least 5 years.

    76. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      emerge googleearth

      And for the WoW fans out there:

      su root -c 'emerge wine' && winecfg && wget http://ftp.somesite.com/path/to/WorldOfWarcraft-Installer.exe && wine WorldOfWarcraft-Installer.exe

      Then you have a shiny new icon for WoW on your desktop. Enjoy. :-P

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    77. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a Google earth repository, not to mention it is part of the medibuntu repository. Proprietary software / closed source for many reasons can't / isn't put into the main repository in part because they have their own license and TOS agreement.
       
      apt-get install wine-doors will let you install a LOT of windows commercial applications. Some require the CD (because if it just let you download it, it would be "piracy"), but Blizzard has a net installer. So for MS Office (why??? *cry*) from wine-doors, with the office CD in the computer, it is one click for each application.
       
      While I would like to see some improved development in wine-doors, what it does do, it does very well. It keeps a repository of windows applications and uses scripts to automate their installers making the installation and maintainence of windows applications easier for Linux/Wine than native windows. I expect win-get will be about the same thing, but for windows :)

    78. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      In the past year, I have compiled exactly one app that I wasn't trying to get a dev build for. All the other stuff shows up via yum - I say yum get 'something', it tells me what it wants to get, and I let it go do that. If your hypothetical app depends on something like libfoo.so instead of libfoo-1.1.4.so, it won't require a recompile either.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    79. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by pyrbrand · · Score: 1

      They sure as heck install MS Office, and back in the day they also installed IE. They can also easily install Photoshop and WoW.

    80. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty sure it's been in the repository for a while, now. Did you try

      apt-cache search google earth

      to see if it's under a silly name like gtkearthgoogle or somesuch?

      Ah, here we go.

      Not quite perfect, though. I would have sworn i'd seen it in the repositories proper, installed it, and found it didn't work very well with the crappy drivers my ancient radeon graphics card has.

    81. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Lost+Engineer · · Score: 1

      Since we're addressing the tax here... Many (most) Mac users probably do install MS Office, so they're paying the MS tax too.

    82. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Draek · · Score: 1

      Simiarly, do new OS X users sit down at their shiny new Macbook Pro and try to install a bunch of Windows applications?

      You'd be surprised. When I got my first (and so far only) Mac so many years ago, looking for recommendations for good text editors and such, there were quite a few forum postings 'round the net asking how to get their .EXE to work ;) made me laugh for a bit, then I remembered the Linux n00bs asking the same thing and felt pity for the other forum members.

      A sad side effect of people learning to think in terms of applications instead of function, I'm afraid.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    83. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      And now for the true hidden tax that both corporations are guilty of, the manufacturing costs to reproduce software is virtually $0, the price both companies charge for their software licensing are outrageously high and in some cases exceed $100 per license. The result, check the SEC filings for these companies and you'll find gross profit margins in excess of 95% in their software licensing.

      How much do you think it costs to develop that software? It's not like MS magically doesn't pay 20-30 people to build the next version of Excel.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    84. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      Well wine does have support for WoW (Gold and Platinum support). New versions of MS Office, maybe not so much. So once you have the installer you can just 'wine WoWInstaller.exe' :)

      I guess if you're installing WoW and MS Office and Photoshop on OS X, that makes the "Apple Tax" even higher. Still, if I had an extra couple thousand dollars to spend, I'd love to get my hands on a nice Apple laptop. :)

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    85. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by WCguru42 · · Score: 1

      =

      Simiarly, do new OS X users sit down at their shiny new Macbook Pro and try to install a bunch of Windows applications?

      If that program is MS Office, yes, they probably do. That's the only MS software on my computer.

      --
      "Educate the mind but never at the expense of the soul."~Blessed Basil Moreau
    86. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      Might be nice to have various Linux distros come with wine preinstalled, or at least an option in the installation. Then those .exe files would work, as long as they're supported in wine's appdb (a lot of them are). Wine could be configured so that if it executes an .exe file that fails to install, it could prompt the user with a nice error message telling them that the software is not compatible. Perhaps it could recommend alternatives (and offer to install those)

      I'm sure that's easier said than done. I can already see some issues with it, but it could be a 'nice to have' up front anyway.

      Then again, that would make it easier for Joe Sixpack to run around installing BritneySpearsPics.exe on all their Linux boxes. :-P

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    87. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 2, Informative

      apt-get install MSOffice Photoshop WorldOfWarcraft

      Why WoW? It installs and runs under WINE as well(for me better) as it does under XP. (the frames-per-second rate actually jumped about 7% and gameplay smoothed noticeably on WINE)

      This tells me you are parroting crap you have no real knowledge of.

      And GoogleEarth, I've been installing that through Kubuntu's repository since 7.10- about a year and a half ago. I just checked, and it's still there in the 9.04beta repo. So spare me the 'past few months' crap.

      MS Office, and Photoshop...you do have a point there for some people, but not relevant to everyone. OpenOffice and GIMP work fine for me and my needs, but YMMV.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    88. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      ..because its linux.

      Its supposed to be better than windows.. and doesnt it have a windows emulator?

      This is not your grandmothers OS (yet.)

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    89. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      HaHaHaHa!
      Before you can get to the Bestbuy, I'll have selected those app's, downloaded, installed and configured them to use- and never touch a command line if I want to go about it the 'slow' way by using the super friendly, self explanatory, and easy GUI for the package manager. Oh, and not have to "Oh, yeah, and then click through the automatic updaters that run immediately afterwards."

      I don't even have to know the name of the program, the package manager gives a good description of every piece of software in the repo when in GUI mode. It is all divided in categories, listed alphabetically.

      You're confusing "cheap," "efficient," and "quick" with "easy."

      No, your are the one confused. (hint: I'll have my install done, work done with the needed app, and be sitting in my recliner watching the game sipping a cold one while you are still mucking about with your PC-even if you Bestbuy is close by!)

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    90. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by nabsltd · · Score: 1

      (here I can "read" the ascii, but I don't know where "20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D" is coming from.

      It's the UUID of the shell object that is "My Computer".

      All objects in the Explorer namespace (Control Panel, My Network Connections, Folder, Drive, etc.) have UUIDs. UUIDs are how shell integration ties things together, so you can do things like show a special menu when you right-click on a particular type of object, and don't need to know the name of that object (which very likely changes from computer to computer or user to user).

      Think of UUIDs as the keys in the Explorer database object table.

    91. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      Actually you don't as long as you design the library well in the first place. You can put placeholders in the original version of the libary and any updates that can be done by replacing the placeholders will not break binary compatibility with applications compiled against an earlier version of the library.

    92. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for any but Kubuntu 9.04, but that has been addressed with Jaunty. (I tried to find something similar in 8.04 and 8.10 and did not find it)

      In 9.04, go to Kmenu>system settings>Advanced tab>PolicyKit Authorization>expand 'org.freedesktop'>the PackageKit Project has what you are looking for.

      I did not spend much time exploring the 8.04/10, it may be there in a different place, but I seem to remember sometime in the past when installing a third party(not in repo) app, the install asking if it should be restricted to current user, or global. I only remember seeing this once though. My memory may well be lying to me also....

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    93. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by xX5h1ll3l46hXx · · Score: 0

      They were talking about an apt port to Windows, and how it would likely only be open source software in the repos so people wouldn't be able to install MSOffice, Photoshop or WoW. So where did installing Windows programs on Linux come from?

      --

      People who rag on smokers need to start paying the taxes smokers do or shut up about it. You have the choice of what restaurant you go to, if you go to one where smoking is allowed you made the choice, it's not the smokers fault you're to dumb to go to a non-smoking establishment.

    94. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You only need to use the repository if you want the extra features it adds, such as updating with the rest of your system. If you want to go the easy way, you can usually just find a package and install it as you would an exe installer on Windows (Here's the download page for OO.o: http://download.openoffice.org/other.html#en-US).

    95. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by xX5h1ll3l46hXx · · Score: 0

      Just remember to get your Windows refund, and push it to get all you can out of them. There's no reason for them to offer you $20 on the refund for something they sell for over $100, well there is, but it's not a good one.

    96. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      How much do you think it costs to develop that software? It's not like MS magically doesn't pay 20-30 people to build the next version of Excel.

      At what rate, $1 billion each annual salary? The gross margins are in no way justified by the development costs of past or future versions. And don't get me wrong, I have no problem with the crazy prices and profits Microsoft makes, lets just be honest about it.

    97. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Are you on dial-up?
      I've never experienced the behavior you describe on a *nix machine. But that is specifically one of my gripes about Windows and especially their Windows Update.

      This past weekend, I installed Kubuntu 8.04, it had hundreds[not 10] packages to update. I set it to update, switched desktops and got on slashdot with no problems. Try that while Windows is updating!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    98. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by IRWolfie- · · Score: 1

      Several Linux distributions work just fine just as installed. They don't need anything beyond what you might have to do if you were installing windows fresh.

      Last time I installed windows I had to spend 2 hours getting and installing drivers. Whereas Ubuntu was usable straight off after install

    99. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a potential business idea.

    100. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      We all know you can't put a Playstation game in a Wii. Can we please move on.

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    101. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      So let them just click. It's been a few years since you needed mad CLI skills for most Distros.

      The CLI is still there for those not afraid of their computer, so 'stuff' can be done quicker and easier than limiting themselves to the GUI, but the GUI is there, and has been for a few years.

      When I started using *nix exclusively, it was over a year before I even opened a CLI. Since then, I won't use an OS without a good CLI.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    102. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by IdahoEv · · Score: 1

      Simiarly, do new OS X users sit down at their shiny new Macbook Pro and try to install a bunch of Windows applications?

      I certainly do. One of the first things I put on every new machine (and all my machines are macs) is a copy of parallels so that I can test my websites in IE and all the other windows browsers. These days I run a few games in parallels as well.

      That's usually all I need from windows, however, anymore.

      --
      I stole this sig from someone cleverer than me.
    103. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      heron@heron6400 ~ $ emerge --search googleearth
      Searching...
      [ Results for search key : googleearth ]
      [ Applications found : 1 ]

      * x11-misc/googleearth
                  Latest version available: 4.2.205.5730
                  Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
                  Size of files: 22,507 kB
                  Homepage: http://earth.google.com/
                  Description: A 3D interface to the planet
                  License: googleearth MIT X11 SGI-B-1.1 openssl as-is ZLIB

    104. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      A lot of the "additional" hardware costs were bullshit too. Comparing the cost of Bluray drive Apple sells in it's stores to the price of one from Best Buy, as if the one from Best Buy wouldn't work on a Mac (assuming it's either USB or Firewire). Comparing the cost of an Airport Extreme base station and Apple branded network file sever to Cisco and Western Digital stuff, again as if Macs don't work with any networked hardware on the market. The only valid comparison in that whole list was between the two ATI video cards, since I'm pretty sure Apple actually does tweak the firmware on those.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    105. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Risen888 · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous. Let's compare the real processes.

      Windows
      ---
      Drive to Best Buy
      Find the software aisle (hard as hell at the Best Buy by my house)
      Find a blueshirt (god forbid you do this before step 2, if so, lose a turn and go back three spaces)
      Explain to them that you don't want to buy a camera
      Bring your $500 software purchase to the register
      Lose a turn
      Explain to the cashier that you don't want to sign up for a Best Buy card
      Pay, go home
      Install five different programs from five CDs with five registration keys and probably an online registration or two.
      Lose three turns.
      Find the program you want to use in the unholy mess of a Start menu
      Get to work.
      Total time: Like a year

      Ubuntu
      ---
      Oh, they're already installed?
      Get to work.
      Total time: 0

      --
      Hey, I finally got my first freak! Took you long enough!
    106. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by SiChemist · · Score: 1

      For google earth, one word: Medibuntu

    107. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by kbielefe · · Score: 1

      You mean those few hours that one day several years ago? If you're a windows user, I'll forgive you for thinking operating system configuration is an ongoing expense. Around here, OS configurations outlast the hardware. I'm on my 2nd monitor and 3rd or 4th hard drive since the last time I did anything resembling a reinstall.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    108. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I can think of a few reasons to install a Windows program in Linux, especially if that program doesn't have a Linux version.

      * Commercial games, this should be obvious
      * MS Office, when certain features are required
      * Photoshop - The GIMP isn't always a good solution
      * Various random apps that work fine under Wine but aren't worth running a VM or rebooting into Windows for (e.g. various religious software)

      And of course:

      * Don't want to pay for Windows, but want/need one or more of the above Windows apps.

      It's possible that you wouldn't install a Windows program in Linux, but don't assume that there's no valid reason to do so.

    109. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      Is tons easier than going to 10 different websites, downloading at least 10 install packages, installing all of them, etc. And then there is keeping all of that up to date.

      And the rebooting. Don't forget the rebooting.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    110. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by esmrg · · Score: 1

      Google Earth, skype, acroread, etc.. are in the medibuntu repository all with the disclaimer that they are not free. Not the latest versions, but that isn't what repos are about. You want bleeding edge, install it yourself.

    111. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

      No. apt-get is more efficient. Going to a website, downloading the program, and double clicking to install isn't harder, its just time consuming.

      It's also more dangerous. Let's say that you need an FTP client but you are not familiar with any brand names. In Linux, the user can search his package manager for an FTP client, install one or all of them, and decide what he likes. In windows, googling for an FTP client leads to hundreds of hits, all of them look like spyware or other malware. I don't feel safe installing any of them. The main advantage of the distro repos is that the user knows that the software is safe (yes, I know about the debian issue, thank you).

      --
      It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    112. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      WINE Is Not an Emulator. It's an open source implementation of the Win32 API, or something like that. :P

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    113. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      win-get is it.

    114. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See, not even moderation works well on Linux.

    115. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by spintriae · · Score: 1

      So how do I install Cubase, B4, Bandstand, and Cakewalk?

    116. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... isn't harder, its just time consuming...

      And the pedant-of-the-day prize goes to...

    117. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by burnin1965 · · Score: 1

      A lot of the "additional" hardware costs were bullshit too.

      Yeah, I noticed that too, but I figured I'd give them the benefit of the doubt as some Apple customers will want to stick with Apple labelled hardware.

      On a related note I purchased a Mac Dual 1GHz G4 in the MDD case a few years back with a basic CD-RW/DVD-ROM, it did not have the "Super Drive" in it to burn DVDs. So I read up on the net about the actual hardware Apple used for the Super Drive, went out and purchased a Pioneer DVD+/-RW drive of the same model, popped it into the Mac and had my DVD burning capability at a reduced price from the Appled labelled Pioneer drive.

      I've since sold that Mac as I was not impressed when some of the software I wanted to purchase for the Mac required a point upgrade in OSX and Apple wanted another $180 for the upgrade. No thanks.

    118. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead of a simple checkbox, you have to type a simple command into a terminal. The horror!

      echo $package hold|dpkg --set-selections

    119. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sudo apt-get install googleearth

      Works like a charm on Ubuntu. And has worked for at least eight months. Of course, that's no counter for making up bullshit and claiming it to be true, now is it?

    120. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by samriel · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Windows, but there is a version of it for Mac OS X.

    121. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Or you could just download the OO.o 3 packages and double click on them; if that doesn't work, just dpkg the things.

    122. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by deltharius · · Score: 1
    123. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Have you ever tried to help a user over e-mail or something? Compare these two:

      Go to the Applitions menu, click Add/Remove, then hit the button next to "Show:" and slide up to "all available applications." Type in "Thunderbird" into the search box next to it. Find Thunderbird in the list, click the checkmark, and then click "Apply Changes" at the bottom. Say Yes to everything is asks.

      Open up the terminal (Applications, accessories), and cut and paste the following without quotes: "apt-get install thunderbird" and press enter. Say yes to everything it asks.

      I'd say most non-techies prefer the latter. I certainly do.

    124. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Kabuthunk · · Score: 1

      I'm quite green when it comes to Linux, but there's one aspect of installing... well... anything that has me want to go back to Windows.

      Does that type of command get around the dependancies?

      Whenever I've attempted (quite often in vain) to install ANYTHING in linux, it can't install because there's a dependancy it needs. So I try to find this dependancy, and THAT needs another 5 dependancies installed.

      Typically, I say 'screw this exponentially-getting-larger list of things I need to install', boot into windows (dual-boot), and install whatever windows-equivilant program without a problem.

      *shudder* depedancies.

      I'm running Fedora Core 5 though, with KDE. Been tempted to upgrade, but I REALLY don't want to lose the few programs that are managing to half-assed work that I need.

      Or failing that, can you recommend a help forum that isn't full of smug jerks that assume you can do anything, and just tell you "install whatever", but give you zero help in doing so?

      --
      Planet Zebeth - Metroid with a twist
    125. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AMEN!

    126. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Auxbuss · · Score: 1

      The ease of installing software on many Linux distributions shouldn't be overrated.

      The ease of installing software on many Linux distributions shouldn't be underrated.

      There, fixed it for you.

      --
      Marc
    127. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this insightful? This is the same old tired argument that gets dragged out every time someone does a cost comparison.

      Let me give you a real-world example. I support 370+ workstations, 50-something servers and 30+ laptops. Each requires significant time rebooting regularly to maintain performance and stability. Each requires costly antivirus software. We are moving aay from Windows for the entire company as a result of this. RHEL5 has replaced many of our Windows servers already, not only with fewer servers but ones which require less maintenance. Cost savings are huge to us, and we enjoy the uptime and performance.

      These benefits were seen on the exact same hardware, but now that we've been running this for more than 5 years we've already upgraded some of the hardware and it's absolutely screaming fast.

      Go play with your toy systems, reboot them, apply service packs and security updates. Go live in that world. I'm happy to be leaving it.

    128. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is actually apt-get for Windows, but it's an add-on for cygwin and so only downloads cygwin stuff. I tried it, but iirc it only downloaded the binaries in .tar.gz archives, and didn't unpack them to /bin for whatever reason.

    129. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by ignavus · · Score: 1

      I'm still compiling the system you insensitive clod!

      Clearly we need a new version of Gentoo called "Urgentoo".

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    130. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by icoer · · Score: 1

      Aye the ease of installing is great... almost enough to offset the pain of figuring out what you need to install. Granted once you've found the correct package everything usually works great.

    131. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by brackishboy · · Score: 1

      I think the granparent post probably meant that there's no 'easy' way to install WoW such as apt-get.

      While it can doubtlessly run well under WINE, I'm prepared to bet you'd have to get your hands dirtier than the average user is willing to or capable of.

    132. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Brain+Damaged+Bogan · · Score: 1

      it's even easier than that...
      there are graphical interfaces to apt that allow the user to search for "word processor" "graphical editor" "email client" and click what they want, then hit the install button.
      the command line isn't required AT ALL for basic linux users
      (unless, like everyone has at some stage, they are having trouble with alsa... *whistles* - if you didn't hear that, better check your alsa.conf)

      --
      -- Sex is the antonym of pringles. Once you pop it's time to stop.
    133. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Brain+Damaged+Bogan · · Score: 1

      apt-cache search MSOffice
      won't return any results... so why would you expect
      apt-get install MSOffice
      to work? how the hell did you get modded insightful

      --
      -- Sex is the antonym of pringles. Once you pop it's time to stop.
    134. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by rts008 · · Score: 1

      Well there are many ways to get installed, the easiest for Windows users would just dbl. click it. If you have never ran an exe file before, it will ask what to open it with...WINE will be on the list of options, select WINE, and off ya go.

      Or, you can right-click on the exe, and select 'open with WINE'. Exactly the way the WoW installer works on Windows. It truly is no different...it even ends up in your applications menu.

      Seriously, just dbl click and watch it install, or r.click and open with WINE and watch it install. Is it easier with Windows? No, or at least not on XP. I have done both. It actually installs quicker in WINE on Kubuntu 8.04 than it did on XP-same machine, same HDD...dual boot to diff partitions. And it ran smoother with faster f.p.s. rates in WINE on Kubuntu than it did on XP Pro SP3.

      So, for the same exact install proceedure,faster install, and with the bonus of better performance, *nix plus WINE is easier.

      You would lose that bet decisively, sir!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    135. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      where you're banging your hot wife

      This is slashdot, you insensitive clod!

    136. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by umeboshi · · Score: 1

      Thanks! I appreciate the info, and I had suspected that this was a uuid or hash of sorts, but I didn't know what it was a uuid of. My problem is not really the uuid, per se, but knowing what a particular uuid represents. Regardless, you've given me enough info to where I might be able to google up an answer. :)

    137. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by MaxVT · · Score: 1

      Are you actually using the "gui based package managers"? In simple cases, they are great, but for many apps there is simply no way to do it graphic-mode-only. And The Other Way is not for a typical home user. Let's say I'm a typical user wanting to install Google Earth, a typical application. That's what I had to do: http://maxvt.livejournal.com/30150.html

    138. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      The gross margins are in no way justified by the development costs of past or future versions.

      What world do you live in where MS needs to justify their gross margins based merely on production cost disregarding dev costs (half or more of total costs)? MS has a fairly high profit margin, but it's not anywhere 95% - more like 30% of revenue.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    139. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      MS Office 08 already exists for Mac and it's not too bad. I prefer the windows version (Office 07), but I keep a copy installed because I still can't stand any of the other office suites.

      I don't play WoW, but luckily Adobe Lightroom works on both Windows and OSX, and the license allows me to use it on both my desktop and laptop. Best software purchase I've ever made.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    140. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Amorya · · Score: 1

      I maintain that the thinking in terms of application is not a bad thing. In the Linux community, it often seems to be really hard to justify not using on particular program in a category... "but they do the same thing and your favourite isn't in our repository, so use this instead". Woe betide you if you prefer an app on another platform. Taking the obvious Photoshop/GIMP example, and many (although not all) Linux advocates can't see that GIMP is not an acceptable substitute.

      It's a symptom of a bigger issue, where the feature list of an app is valued above how those features are implemented (i.e. the usability). Whatever you think about the Delicious Generation trend on the Mac, the developer community here spends enough time thinking of usability. But getting usability right often means removing options and configurability, and limiting the feature set. This all goes against a lot of the Linux philosophy.

      Essentially, if you discourage people thinking of a particular program, and suggest they specify desired functionality instead, it removes the ability for one program to be better than another. Since usability is not quantifiable like feature set is, it means that the user experience tends towards zero, as app developers move towards the only metric left for their app to be judged on: "Does it do feature X?".

    141. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Cant believe I got flamebait on that one. I thought it was funny as hell. Obv, the person who modded me didn't know perl.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    142. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Draek · · Score: 1

      Yet thinking in terms of applications instead of functionality prevents you from even *trying*, let alone fairly judging, alternative ways of doing the same thing. Examples abound, starting with Word/LaTeX, where the fact that most people are used to graphical editors with lots of pretty buttons prevents them from seeing that LaTeX's "content first, presentation later" approach *is* the superior one both in terms of time spent as well as the quality of the end results.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    143. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by DiLLeMaN · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's another one for those that prefer ports.

      --
      /var/run/twitter.sock is a twitter socket puppet.
    144. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by dwater · · Score: 1

      re installing/upgrading stuff on windows isn't hard...

      I'm guessing you using Windows as an administrator. If you don't run as administrator, it is often 'hard'. Sometimes it's as simple as 'run as...admin' or as inconvenient as switching user to admin (for my parents, switching user crashes windows, so they have to log out, in as admin to install, log out again and log back in again at the non-admin user).

      Firefox, for example, gives all sorts of problems when it tries to update itself as a non-admin user. Thunderbird too.

      Sometimes it *is* hard, but I'm talking about XP...not sure about Vista since I've not used it (I saw it once, but that was at a friend's house and he works for Microsoft).

      --
      Max.
    145. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Saysys · · Score: 1

      The point is that the average smart computer user who does not program knows what you are talking about here but has no idea how to begin nor is his time worth figuring it out.

    146. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Saysys · · Score: 1

      Time is still the tax, the time it takes to be knowledgeable enough to know about what you just said.

    147. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Saysys · · Score: 1

      You are totally off, installing MSOffice Photoshop and WoW are very common occurrences on OSX. If linux where supported at the same level by developers then it would be more than a sandbox for nerds.

    148. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by MagnusE · · Score: 1

      that's why there is http://www.filehipp.com/ :D :D

      --
      Fortune Rota Volvitur
    149. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by pxc · · Score: 1

      Editing a plain text file is not not not not not the same as editing the God awful binary-only hexidecimal-string-infested monster called the registry. And if you do it using a GUI (Adept or Synaptic), it's still not nearly as bad as the regedit interface.

    150. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by skiman1979 · · Score: 1

      You are totally off, installing MSOffice Photoshop and WoW are very common occurrences on OSX. If linux where supported at the same level by developers then it would be more than a sandbox for nerds.

      Well I did get marked 4,Informative for my post (doesn't seem to happen too often for me ;) ). So I guess at least some people agree with me.

      Granted, I've never used a Mac before, except for old Macintosh systems back in the late 80's or early 90's. I understand a lot of Mac users will install apps like MSOffice, Photoshop, and WoW according to your post. Are these applications actually ported to the Mac? I would assume so.

      Again, why would someone try to install a Windows application in Linux? I'm sure gamers out there don't try to play their Xbox 360 games on a Nintendo Gamecube. If you buy a box for Halo 3 and it says Xbox 360 on it, you wouldn't try to play it on a Dreamcast. If you buy an app that says "Mac" on the box, but not "Windows" you probably wouldn't try to install it in Vista. I realize there aren't many (if any) Linux applications sold at retail stores, but if someone buys MS Office and it says "Windows and Mac" on it, they should know that Linux isn't Windows, and Linux isn't Mac OS X.

      Although they might be pleased to know that even though that nice new application they bought won't work natively in Linux, it might just work fine in wine under Linux :)

      --
      Having a smoking section in a public restaurant is like having a peeing section in a public swimming pool.
    151. Re:How about those hidden linux taxes? by Lennie · · Score: 1

      "3. Because of point 2, every app needs to use the same shared library version."

      nonsense, you just need to install the right shared library, have a look at the output of the ldd-command.

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
  12. Linux users by onion2k · · Score: 5, Funny

    Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads.

    That's because using Linux gives you dandruff.

    I'm just kidding.

    Living in a basement is what gives you dandruff. :)

    1. Re:Linux users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hey, some of us live in an attic.

    2. Re:Linux users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen more dandruff on Mac users than PC or Linux combined. Of course that could be because of the black turtle necks Mac users all wear.

    3. Re:Linux users by publicworker · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I bought a mac and I still have dandruff! What am I doing wrong? Plz help!

    4. Re:Linux users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads.

      That's because using Linux gives you dandruff.

      I was about to suggest that with Linux comes the head lice with the correlation of one.

    5. Re:Linux users by MegaMahr · · Score: 1

      You are headed in the right direction, but to rid yourself of the dandruff problem once and for all you'll need to move out of the basement and into a loft, start shopping at the Gap, and flip up your collar. And if you're shirts don't have a collar to flip, start over at step 1...

      --
      788652 = 2 x 2 x 3 x 3 x 19 x 1153
    6. Re:Linux users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it really that fucking hard to spell the word "your" correctly?

    7. Re:Linux users by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You've bought a faulty Mac. You should return it to the store, and get a working one.

    8. Re:Linux users by Ifni · · Score: 1

      It's just dry skin! Really!

      --

      Oh, was that my outside voice?

    9. Re:Linux users by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I was going to say "I don't live in a basement and I still have dandruff!" but then I realized my apartment is a half-basement...

  13. Supersize Me by pohl · · Score: 1

    Roger Kay's paper was a lot like the movie Supersize Me, wherein he accepted anything he was offered. Microsoft has a huge product line. If that standard were applied fairly one could easily make Windows PCs appear expensive. "Would you like Office with that?"

    --

    The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    1. Re:Supersize Me by guruevi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, the fact of the matter is: Mac comes with just about everything. Non-linear video editing, photo editing and organizers and they're very powerful. The systems you buy at BestBuy or any other shop are kinda bare compared to that just to keep the costs down. If you have to include a comparable video editing package on Windows you'll add easily $200-500 and Adobe's Photoshop Elements or something comparable is also at least a $100.

      I have to support systems in a corporate setting and I have everything here from Dell to IBM to HP to Fujitsu-Siemens including Apple. I like so much better to deal with Apple for support. If they notice you know what you're doing, they'll just quit reading their script and send you on to either an engineer or somebody to arrange for a repair or replacement part. And the package with the new hardware comes in the next day with FedEx or UPS, you put in the old hardware, rip of a sticker and while the delivery guy is still standing there you give it back. Dell especially can have you on the line literally for hours and you're still not past an indian guy reading scripts and the hardware comes in on a weekly schedule even though we have (had - cancelled after several horror-stories) 'gold' support. The Apple server systems have next-day (usually same-day) on-site support for at least 1 year or 3 years when you buy the extended warranty package. IBM and HP have similar support but you need to pay them a lot more money (we pay IBM several 1000's per year for that type of support on just a single system)

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    2. Re:Supersize Me by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      IBM and HP are almost always good to the tech-savvy.

      For Dell, get yourself "Dell certified" and the Indian call centers disappear. You'll get the parts delivered by just asking for them.
      You: "Bad RAM, PN #######, tested in another machine"
      Them: "Sending RMA #########, you have X days to return the failed part"
      Of course, the extra cost may not be worth it if you're not in an all-dell environment.

    3. Re:Supersize Me by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Well, the fact of the matter is: Mac comes with just about everything. Non-linear video editing, photo editing and organizers and they're very powerful.

      Since when did OSX come with that stuff for free? Last I checked (thirty seconds ago), Final Cut Express 4 costs $199 to add to a MacBook Pro when you order, iWork '09 is $50, Aperture 2 (photo editor) is $199... the list goes on.

      I hope you're not deliberately misrepresenting Apple's product line.

    4. Re:Supersize Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mac comes with just about everything. Non-linear video editing, photo editing and organizers and they're very powerful. The systems you buy at BestBuy or any other shop are kinda bare compared to that just to keep the costs down. If you have to include a comparable video editing package on Windows you'll add easily $200-500 and Adobe's Photoshop Elements or something comparable is also at least a $100.

      Get real.

      Windows includes (and provides free updates for) a "comparable" non-linear video editing package (Windows Movie Maker). MS has also done a recent rewrite (like Apple did for iMovie '08) called Windows Live Movie Maker (beta). Note that, unlike Movie Maker, upgrades for iMovie are not free (you must upgrade iLife for $80).

      Spending "easily $200-500" will get you Windows video editing software that goes way beyond what iMovie can do. To get "comparable" software for Apple, you'd need to spend at least $200 for Final Cut Express.

      Comparing iPhoto, a basic photo organizing application (with very limited photo editing), to a photo editing app like Photoshop Elements is laughable. Haven't you heard of Windows Live Photo Gallery (free with free updates)? Also, like iMovie, iPhoto is part of the $80 iLife suite.

  14. I'm not trying to defend Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was just pointing out why people tend to bash Microsoft and why Apple has a premium on its products. If you ask me, given that Apple's quality has dropped as of late, there really isn't anything left justifying paying more for an Apple laptop.

    1. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by v1 · · Score: 1

      given that Apple's quality has dropped as of late,

      Can you link some of those for us to look at? ("pictures, or it didn't happen")

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    2. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by gcnaddict · · Score: 3, Informative

      He has a point. Macbook discoloration (pre-unibody), case chipping (pre-unibody, and this has happened to mine as well), as well as razor-sharp edges on all unibody macbooks. That and the overuse of heat paste, the general heat problems, screen backlighting unevenness... these are things I haven't seen on my dell, oddly enough.

      --
      Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by joh · · Score: 1

      He has a point. Macbook discoloration (pre-unibody), case chipping (pre-unibody, and this has happened to mine as well), as well as razor-sharp edges on all unibody macbooks. That and the overuse of heat paste, the general heat problems, screen backlighting unevenness... these are things I haven't seen on my dell, oddly enough.

      And still, try to sell a Dell laptop after two or three years and compare that to what you get for a MacBook after two or three years...

    4. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 1

      Erm, how about dell hard drives getting the click of death, dell hard drives showing up partially formatted (on machines bought with preinstalled software), Dell monitors arcing and frying themselves, Dell laptops gradually disintegrating over a period of about two years. Right, for every anecdote you've got against Apple, I've got one against Dell, because I've seen just about every problem and issue with them both. It doesn't make either of them right. When you actually dig up some statistics on average lifetime of computers by brand and their return rate due to defects, come talk to me.

      As for me, I'm typing this on a four year old macbook pro that looks and runs about as good as the day I bought it. I could be wrong, but given that I expect an apple laptop to run about five years before it gets too slow to fix, I'm betting that the increased lifetime destroys most if not any advantage you get buy buying a cheaper machine. Are they perfect, sure as hell not, there are issues, but I've seen enough shitty laptops out there to realize that sometimes you get what you pay for.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    5. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      He has a point. Macbook discoloration (pre-unibody), case chipping (pre-unibody, and this has happened to mine as well), as well as razor-sharp edges on all unibody macbooks. That and the overuse of heat paste, the general heat problems, screen backlighting unevenness... these are things I haven't seen on my dell, oddly enough.

      Pre-unibody, pre-unibody... So I guess his point is that quality of Mac builds had dropped, but is now improving?

    6. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      I'm tired of people saying their apple runs just as good four years later. Its almost technically impossible. Hardware degrades. It has nothing to do with the OS and no, the component quality in a macbook is *not* that much better than what you'd find in a high-end laptop. I guarantee you its NOT running as well as the first day you bought it, you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years of usage unless its never getting used in which case the same principles can be applied to any other computer.

      The only reason they sell for so much now is precisely because they don't offer any low budget lines. If they had, then you wouldn't be able to sell your stuff second hand so easily.

      If any Apple cultist says their machine runs just as well as it did four years after purchase OR touts how much they can resell it for, they're just as disillusioned as a MS apologist. I think OS X is a very fine operating system. I *do* think it *is* better than Vista. However, its not the second coming of Jesus Christ like so many of you people believe. Its *NOT* good enough to base your entire lives around it NOR is it good enough to bash other people just for not having one. Its also not good enough to justify any sort of elitism any cultist has (I'm not saying you're one of them, but you can't deny that Apple groups are overrun with them). There are PLENTY of situations where OS X is *NOT* the best choice for someone and that includes various home consumers, not just business environments.

    7. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by pedestrian+crossing · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm tired of people saying their apple runs just as good four years later. Its almost technically impossible. Hardware degrades. It has nothing to do with the OS and no, the component quality in a macbook is *not* that much better than what you'd find in a high-end laptop. I guarantee you its NOT running as well as the first day you bought it, you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years of usage unless its never getting used in which case the same principles can be applied to any other computer.

      Not to defend Apple here, but please explain to me how, for example, a CPU or RAM "degrades". As far as I can tell, either it works or it doesn't. Does RAM run slower? That would be hard to believe, because it is externally clocked by the MB.

      That's not to say that RAM or a CPU won't eventually -fail-, but until they fail they don't really degrade.

      I call BS.

      --
      A house divided against itself cannot stand.
    8. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by ben0207 · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure on that. My old iBook G4 is easily 5 years old, and it still runs fast enough to do everything my GF needs it to in a reasonable manner, and it still looks pretty good (the case is scuffed as shit and there's a couple of chips, but it still looks pretty good) The only issues are that the screen isn't very bright (I'm not sure if this is because it has degraded or because over the years LCDs have risen in quality) and the HD is potentially on its way out.

      I don't know if a comparably priced Dell/HP etc would still be working, though FWIW my Compaq bought at the same time died utterly three years ago (motherboard committed suicide and took the PSU with it)

      --
      cmd-q.co.uk - some sort of stupid fucking internet bullshit
    9. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What the hell are you talking about? Maybe you better clean out the registry on your windows machine, or better yet reformat, and find out how fast your machine used to be before you start trying to tell me about my much RAM is degrading. Yes, things like backlights on LCDs fade with use, and batteries have shorter lifespans, but that's normal wear and tear, the laptop itself runs just fine. I don't get any fewer floating point calculations per second, nor do my 3D rendered objects get any fewer frames per second. You can bitch and moan all you wish about how the Apple computers use standard components, but that doesn't explain why my Dell laptop fell apart after two years and my macbook pro is going strong after four. It's called QA/QC and it's expensive, look it up.

      --
      Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
    10. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by binarylarry · · Score: 1

      lol, you actually think a MacBook is a good long term investment?

      They devalue at similar rates.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    11. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Idiomatick · · Score: 1

      Their monitors are nowhere near what they used to be... And screens on the macbooks

    12. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Hardware degrades. It has nothing to do with the OS and no, the component quality in a macbook is *not* that much better than what you'd find in a high-end laptop. I guarantee you its NOT running as well as the first day you bought it, you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years of usage

      As a dumpster diver, I can tell you that it's pretty much always the software. The hardware is usually 100% operational...

      Now components might fail (fans, harddisks, powersupplies are quite typical), but hardware doesn't decay at all in the way you describe.

      So, allow me to say: [citation needed]

    13. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      I don't know if a comparably priced Dell/HP etc would still be working, though FWIW my Compaq bought at the same time died utterly three years ago

      It most likely would. Up until January 2007, I ran a Fujitsu-Siemens P-III 600MHz with 512Meg RAM as my primary laptop. It started to physically fall apart and that's why I replaced it. The hardware itself was fine. Anyway, I bought that laptop second hand from the company I left (which was Fujitsu Siemens) in December 2004, to that's a full 2 years in my possesion. That laptop had already served someone else for about 4 to 5 years. (P-III 600MHz was released when? Fall 1999?)

      Before this long-lived laptop I owned a iBook G3 600MHz/640Meg RAM. It died after three years of usage due to logic board failure. Since Apple had already announced the Intel switch, I was not going to invest in a new iBook G4. Oh, and for the record: I treated my iBook like my firstborn and the Fujitsu-Siemens thrown in my backpack more than once.

      All I want to say: longevity is just a matter of luck....

      (Oh, and another one: my dad uses to this day is P-III 733MHz Dell which he bought new in, no idea... 2000? (We did upgrade the RAM and the harddisk though)

    14. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      but that doesn't explain why my Dell laptop fell apart after two years and my macbook pro is going strong after four.

      I'm not the guy claiming that hardware degrades, but longevity of hardware is mostly a matter of luck. I tried explaining that above to another poster too.

    15. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      Transistor degradation such as gate-oxide breakdown and hot-electron effects will effect transistor performance. Eventually the chip will fail, but not suddenly. Basically, the chip will be closed for x cycles, however, its not capable of pulling that off. Eventually the difference is too great and it will fail. Transistors don't always work at the same speed and then fail, they degrade. Most electronics degrade, thats what eventually leads to failure, but not some sort of binary failure of "it either works or it doesn't."

      I'm not saying there will be a drastic change in speed, but it will be there assuming you use the device frequently.

    16. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      I posted this in response to someone else...

      Transistor degradation such as gate-oxide breakdown and hot-electron effects will effect transistor performance. Eventually the chip will fail, but not suddenly. Basically, the chip will be clocked for x cycles, however, its not capable of pulling that off. Eventually the difference is too great and it will fail. Transistors don't always work at the same speed and then fail, they degrade. Most electronics degrade, thats what eventually leads to failure, but not some sort of binary failure of "it either works or it doesn't."

      I'm not saying there will be a drastic change in speed, but it will be there assuming you use the device frequently.

      Wikipedia transistor degradation if you'd like. I'm not going out of my way to do research, just know it exists and its not difficult to find. I don't have to convince you. If you actually want to know, you'd do the research, if you refuse to believe it, you won't, there's really not much I can do beyond that.

    17. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Megane · · Score: 1

      I'm tired of people saying their apple runs just as good four years later. Its almost technically impossible. Hardware degrades. It has nothing to do with the OS and no, the component quality in a macbook is *not* that much better than what you'd find in a high-end laptop. I guarantee you its NOT running as well as the first day you bought it, you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years of usage unless its never getting used in which case the same principles can be applied to any other computer.

      ...says someone who's never used one. It's not the hardware that degrades, it's MS Windows that degrades, what with all that spyware and virus and bot crap. And those cheaply built Dulls.

      Five year old Macs are still quite usable, because Apple isn't cramming more crap into the OS every other year to force people to upgrade. You just don't get to run Parallels Desktop on PowerPC. OS X so far has been consistently able to run the latest version on a five year old machine. But Vista was barely able to run on many computers that it was shipped on when it was new.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    18. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      Transistor degradation. I went more in depth in other posts, but I don't feel like repeating myself to multiple people. If you're curious look it up, if you don't feel like changing your mind, ignore me like you would have even if I did the research for you.

      I didn't say Apple didn't use higher quality, I just said not by much. Plus, you're comparing Dell components which are vastly cheaper than Apple's. At a time however, they *did* get their components from the same manufacturers.

    19. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by PJ1216 · · Score: 1

      *clocked for x cycles.

    20. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      I don't know what hardware you are dealing with, but I expect most of my computer hardware to work for several years without any degradation at all. I'll allow that hard drives or fans might fail, and hard drives might develop bad sectors. But the CPU, motherboard, RAM and pretty much everything else shouldn't degrade at all in a 5 year period, especially if you clean out the dust now and then. Laptops certainly might have problems due to the abuse they experience, but they should not just "degrade". The only reason any computer on any OS should get any slower is from too much crap getting installed (or subconsciously comparing it to a newer computer) and should be fixed by a clean install. At the most you might need a new hard drive if the hard drive is going bad.

    21. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Transistor degradation such as gate-oxide breakdown and hot-electron effects will effect transistor performance.

      Ugh.... It's "affect".... But that's not the issue here.

      Wikipedia transistor degradation if you'd like

      like this? You should start an article, don't you think?

      Technically, what you are telling me is that my parents server, a machine bought in 1999, should be extremely slow. It's been running 24/7 for the last 5 years or so. (Same thing for my dads laptop, which was bought in 2000, IIRC... but that one doesn't run 24/7, but at least a couple of hours a day)

      I'm not saying it doesn't degrade, I'm not an electrical engineer, but if it does, the effects are insignificant. If it slows down 0.0001% (number pulled from somewhere very dark), it simply doesn't matter.

      If you actually want to know, you'd do the research, if you refuse to believe it, you won't, there's really not much I can do beyond that.

      This is not about belief. You asserted something, and I asked you some evidence. You said, wikipedia it, but there is no article. Google does have some interesting links, but nothing that I can comprehend. Where is the article for the layman, stating that after (for example) 5 years with moderate usage, his computer will run at about 25% of original performance? Not everyone is an electrical engineer, and I cannot asses such things.

    22. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Case discoloration was a problem with dell D600/D800 and D610/D810 notebooks as well. I didn't care too much because it was convenient enough to have it exchanged on site within 24h after claiming some problem with the touchpad.

    23. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by joh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Computers are no "investment". But that most PC machines are virtually worthless after a few years and Macs still sell for good money is just a fact.

    24. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Not to defend Apple here, but please explain to me how, for example, a CPU or RAM "degrades".

      I think after a while, bits fall off...

      < *ducks* >

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    25. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Old hardware usually benchmarks exactly the same score as it did years ago if it works at all. Saying it is typical that hardware gets slower is ridiculous.

    26. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by v1 · · Score: 1

      I'm tired of people saying their apple runs just as good four years later. Its almost technically impossible. ...
      If any Apple cultist says their machine runs just as well as it did four years after purchase OR touts how much they can resell it for, they're just as disillusioned as a MS apologist.

      On a fairly regular basis, we get people in here with 5, 6, 8, even 10 year old macs, to have them repaired or upgraded. Compare that with how often we even see a windows box 6 or more years old that is still usable.

      "You can't install the latest os. There's not enough HD space, you don't have enough memory, can't add any more memory, and it's dirt slow compared to today's machine. Time to buy a new one." "But why? This machine still works fine? It's not even seven years old yet!"

      Yes we really do have to have that conversation with mac owners from time to time. We like to recommend they get a new machine very 5 years or so, just so upgrading their software isn't too difficult. This is a totally different mindset from windows users that have to get a new machine every 4 years to even have it still be functional.

      As for resale value, we just got in a rush of used macs and sold them. They were anywhere from 2.5-4.5 yrs old, and sold from $800-$1450. I want to see you TRY to get $1400 for a 3 year old windows machine. I was surprised the powermac g5 went for under a grand. Macs certainly do retain their resale value. I upgrade much more frequently because my work requires a high end laptop. I have yet to sell one used for under $1300. We've had to stop accepting G4's (2001'ish) as they are starting to get difficult to sell.

      Curious where you're getting your numbers from?

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    27. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      The point in digital equipment is that the end result is either wrong or right. And computers run at a fixed clock speed.

      So the transistors in RAM and CPU will slowly degrade until they cannot do their task within the time frame dictated by the clock speed. Up to that point you will notice nothing, afterwards you get bit errors. Note that this can take decades, and the idea that cheap RAM always fails within 2-3 years is wrong.

      In short, computers don't get slower. They will fail at some point but that may take much longer than a few years.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    28. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Not so odd, when you realise people just want that Mac if it's been used a bit and just a tad cheaper. It's like a car; get something with some miles on it, bit it'd be out of your price range otherwise.

      Dell? Go grab a new one. Not all that more expensive, and probably on sale. Again.

    29. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Um... you realize that you have stories from both because they both get their hardware from the same place, right?

      What I mean is, Dell sells me a Seagate hard drive in my laptop, and Apple sells me a Seagate hard drive in my laptop. It's not quite fair to say "Apple's hard drive" or "Dell's hard drive" because neither hard drive was made by either company.

      By the way, I'm writing this on a two-year-old Dell, and it works just as well as it did when I bought it. Before you say "I said my Macbook is four years old!", I used an IBM Thinkpad (pre-Lenovo) for eight years without issues.

      IMHO, laptop longevity is much more a function of how the user treats the laptop than of how the manufacturer made it. In other words, if you treat your laptop like a textbook, it's (generally) not going to last very long, no matter who you bought it from.

    30. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by binarylarry · · Score: 1

      Please back up your claim, thanks.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    31. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by joh · · Score: 1

      Just believe what you like, this is easier for both of us.

    32. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the same principle as needing to top up your headlight fluid.

      I'm tired of people saying their apple runs just as good four years later. Its almost technically impossible. Hardware degrades. It has nothing to do with the OS and no, the component quality in a macbook is *not* that much better than what you'd find in a high-end laptop. I guarantee you its NOT running as well as the first day you bought it, you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years of usage unless its never getting used in which case the same principles can be applied to any other computer.

      Not to defend Apple here, but please explain to me how, for example, a CPU or RAM "degrades". As far as I can tell, either it works or it doesn't. Does RAM run slower? That would be hard to believe, because it is externally clocked by the MB.

      That's not to say that RAM or a CPU won't eventually -fail-, but until they fail they don't really degrade.

      I call BS.

    33. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by GaryPatterson · · Score: 1

      www.ebay.com

      (Sorry for the brevity, but every time I've looked at both on eBay, the Mac stuff commands high prices years after release while the PC stuff is virtually given away. Personal experience, your milage may vary, contents may have settled in transit.)

    34. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      The chip won't slow down, it'll simply fail.

      Individual components can degrade in terms of becoming slower to change state, less able to hold a charge, increasing in resistance, decreasing in voltage tolerance, and so on. But those are individual component characteristics.

      The things made from those, like CPUs and motherboards work on the assumption of that its component parts have characteristics within some tolerance value. When some component goes out of the acceptable range, all sorts of things can happen. Critical components failing can result in the CPU getting fried, getting constant crashes or the computer not turning on. You might also get lucky and had some unused part fail to no ill effect.

      So no, you won't find evidence that the computer will become 25% slower. What possibly gets slower is something deep inside the CPU. Eventually it doesn't change state fast enough, and the CPU starts working incorrectly.

    35. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Well, that's pretty much what I thought. It simply breaks. That's fine with me, but the person actually asserted that the hardware became slower and that was highly suspicious to me.

      What are the timeframes of this happening? Within the lifespan of a typical computer? That a 10 year old computer eventually fails is to be expected. Now, a 1 year old failing due to degradation would be a outrage.

    36. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      No, he spoke about transistors. Transistors is what a CPU is made of.

      You can think of it as a huge rail network. The system relies on the timing to be right. If the rails break down, or a train slows down too much, you can end up with a huge crash.

      Now what he also said is that failures aren't necessarily huge and dramatic. You may have an absolutely vital part break, then the computer one day stops working. But there exist subtle failure modes. For instance bad capacitors can cause random crashes with no easily determinable origin. Bad RAM may cause all sorts of issues, like none at all (if you're very lucky), a bad pixel on the screen, or disk corruption.

      I've had hardware die in different ways, and it usually doesn't suddenly die one day. I've had a laptop screen fail over a period of weeks, getting worse and worse over time. Hard disks may keep working with some bad sectors. Components with overheating or soldering problems often display intermittent problems before really dying. Worn out fans keep on spinning for some time before failing. LCD backlights and OLEDs gradually decrease in brightness, and so on.

      How long it takes for something to break in this manner depends on the component, usage and environment. But no hardware lasts forever, and doesn't necessarily just die one day, having worked perfectly the day before.

    37. Re:I'm not trying to defend Apple by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      No.... He said said that computers deteriorate.. The original post din't even mention transistors:

      you just can't admit it to yourself. No CPU, RAM, harddrive, etc etc etc is going to run as well as it did after four years

      So if you state such a thing it must deteriorate in a measurable way for the end-user. That isn't exactly true. A component that starts to get flaky is by definition already defective. You get random crashes? You investigate. A computer component no working within specs is broken.

      I'm not contesting transistors deteriorate, but I am contesting that this has a real effect on the end-user experience. I have several consumer-end computer over 7 years old that work perfectly fine. That 24/7.... 7 years is pretty much "old" for a computer, even for Macs (from which this discussion originated) Sure, if the transistor decay makes my hardware unusable in 45 years... does it really matter?

      It simply is not the same as saying "computers deteriorate". If this had any real effect at all (except for dying components) this stuff would be published all over the place. It simply is not relevant for the end-user.

  15. Age brings maturity by GF678 · · Score: 1

    At some point, I think most people grow up and tune out this kinda of shit. It's really tiring to see folks root for one corporation over another.

    1. Re:Age brings maturity by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      I don't know. Age doesn't always bring maturity--go to a professional sporting competition and watch the fanatics watching one corporation battle another.

    2. Re:Age brings maturity by ph0rk · · Score: 1

      I really, really wish I had mod points right now.

      They're companies that exist to extract money from your pockets, people - not athletic teams or some other totem.

      --
      semantics are everything!
  16. I can see the press now by David+Gerard · · Score: 5, Funny

    Millions of smug Mac users and the four hundred smug Linux users pointed and laughed, having long given up trying to convince their Windows-using friends to see sense.

    "There's a reason the Unix system on Mac OS X is called Darwin," said appallingly smug Mac user Arty Phagge.

    "It can't be stupid if everyone else runs it," said Windows user Joe Beleaguered, who had lost all his email, business files, MP3s and porn again. "Macs cost more than Windows PCs."

    "Yes," said Phagge. "Yes, they do."

    Ubuntu Linux developer Hiram Nerdboy frantically tried to get our attention about something or other, but we can't say we care.

    --
    http://rocknerd.co.uk
    1. Re:I can see the press now by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Troll? I think the Ubuntu fanboys with mod points are feeling a bit insecure today.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:I can see the press now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a cut-n-paste

    3. Re:I can see the press now by akorvemaker · · Score: 1

      ... said Windows user Joe Beleaguered, who had lost all his email, business files, MP3s and porn again.

      Offhandedly, I've had iTunes remove songs and complete albums on several occasions, actually deleting the files. This has occured under both OS X and WinXP. And an iTunes "upgrade" recently deleted my entire library (again, deleting the files, not just removing their entries in iTunes). Quite a pain in the buttocks.

      I much prefer working on a Mac, but I wouldn't trust iTunes with anything of value. It's the only program I've ever had which has done things like this. Windows is annoying, but usually not actively destructive.

      Hurray for backups.

    4. Re:I can see the press now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Offhandedly, I've had iTunes remove songs and complete albums on several occasions, actually deleting the files. This has occured under both OS X and WinXP. And an iTunes "upgrade" recently deleted my entire library (again, deleting the files, not just removing their entries in iTunes). Quite a pain in the buttocks.

      I much prefer working on a Mac, but I wouldn't trust iTunes with anything of value.

      I don't like any of these music library programs. They all seem to do something undesirable at some stage. I just have a 'music' directory with a load of single tracks in it and a sub-directory for each album, m3u playlists, and drag/drop to load my music player. Works perfectly 100% of the time.

    5. Re:I can see the press now by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      That's very weird. I've been using iTunes for a long time, and I don't recall ever having the problems you describe.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    6. Re:I can see the press now by reygahnci · · Score: 1

      Good point... eventually this is what it came down to: It will cost me $X more dollars on my one-time purchase to get a Mac Pro instead of a high-end personally built PC with Windows, but on the other hand, I will never have to utter the phrase "time to reformat" ever again... worth every penny.

    7. Re:I can see the press now by David+Gerard · · Score: 1

      There's a reason I keep everything in a folder tree. Music players that try to do it for me just piss me off.

      --
      http://rocknerd.co.uk
    8. Re:I can see the press now by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

      Jump right to the Ubuntu fanboys, why doncha! Totally forget that the Windows fanboys could have modded him troll as well. You're so OS-ist, all the lot of yah. Sick and tired of it.

  17. Hygeine by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads.

    If they'd shower a bit more often scalp dryness wouldn't be a problem.

    --
    If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
  18. Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pack? by WillAdams · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Five licenses, less than $200:

    http://www.amazon.com/Apple-Version-10-5-6-Leopard-5-User/dp/B000BR0NPO

    (and no feature variation betwixt home and work)

    How much will 5 upgrades to Windows 7 cost me?

    William

    --
    Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
  19. What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Yvan256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They only talk about the hardware, not the software. Most people I know buy a Mac because of Mac OS X and iLife, not because the machines "look good".

    1. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most people I know do not buy a Mac, because they just want a web browser and a computer that can download photos from their camera -- both Windows and Mac OS X have been more than capable of doing this for years now. If that is all someone wants, why would (not "should") they pay more for Mac OS X?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by TTURabble · · Score: 1

      Also, your average non-geek doesn't care about an apple tax or linux, they see all the "cool" things you can do on an apple machine so they go out and buy one.

      Lets not forget that there are a bunch of people out there who call the Nintendo Wii "Nintendo Sports" and aren't even aware you can buy different games for it.

    3. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Because the vast majority of people don't give a damn about the OS - if they even know what it is.

      Yes, we know that a niche of geeks may prefer to run a specific OS, OS X, AmigaOS, whatever, but the point is that those people have already made up their might, and are unlikely to be swayed by a simple advert.

    4. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by The+Cisco+Kid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Whats actually weird about the Microsoft ads, is instead of saying "Windows", they call it "a PC".

      A PC is a hardware platform. It can run a variety of Operating Systems, many of which are not licensed by Microsoft and are not called "Windows". Heck, if you get just the right combination of "PC" hardware, and you have the right skillset, you can even run a slightly modified MacOSX on a "PC".

      Despite the fact that way too many people are accustomed to assuming "PC" = "Windows" and Microsoft happily encouraging them to do so because that furthers the assumption that there is no such thing as a "PC" that runs anything else, "PC" does NOT automatically mean the same thing as "Windows PC"

      In fact, taking the literal, original, generic meaning of "PC", which was "Personal Computer", the reference "PC" could even refer to a hardware sold by Apple itself. But at the very least, even if you take it to mean "IBM PC" "compatible", it still doesn't automatically mean "Windows".

      Yes, I know I will get flamed by brainwashed sycophants and MS astroturfers. I don't care.

    5. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > If that is all someone wants, why would (not "should") they pay more for Mac OS X?

      a) They don't want to become part of a botnet

      b) If they buy a desktop machine, there probably won't be a price difference.

      If someone has meagre, simple computing requirements then it makes some
      sense that their desktop computer be slightly invisible. Minis work very
      well in this respect and compare well to similarly price and uglier
      machines.

      Sure, you can bargain hunt for cheaper PCs. You might even care about
      the extra cores in the more expensive PCs (but probably not). However,
      the casual novice user isn't likely to bother.

      I would also like to take this opportunity to mention that the DVD
      drive in my ~ 12mo old "bargain sh*tbox PC" just went tits up. This
      is also something else to consider.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      a) They don't want to become part of a botnet

      There are botnets comprised of Mac OS X machines that target ssh and php on other OS X machines. Sure, not the default setup for macs, but ipfw is off by default, so turning on ssh opens it to the world, and most mac users I know don't update their system.

      I would also like to take this opportunity to mention that the DVD drive in my ~ 12mo old "bargain sh*tbox PC" just went tits up. This is also something else to consider.

      Replacing this in a "bargain sh*tbox PC": $20, Apple: $$$$

    7. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by smitty97 · · Score: 1

      good point, but also "Windows" is a damaged brand at this point. They know people want a new "PC" but are careful not to remind them that it's going to come loaded up with Vista

      --
      mod me funny
    8. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by pxlmusic · · Score: 3, Funny

      one of my customers calling in one day was a mac user. we were troubleshooting his internet connection, and i asked him to reboot his pc.

      he quickly "corrected" me, "it's a mac, not a pc."

      as much as i wanted to correct that douche, i figured it was best just left alone. i realize that not all mac users are suckered fanboys.

      --
      "If for any reason you're not satisfied with our service, I hate you."
    9. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by bar-agent · · Score: 1

      A PC is a hardware platform. It can run a variety of Operating Systems, many of which are not licensed by Microsoft and are not called "Windows". Heck, if you get just the right combination of "PC" hardware, and you have the right skillset, you can even run a slightly modified MacOSX on a "PC".

      This was true in the 80s. Terms change. Now, the generic word is "computer," and specifically, "PCs" run Windows and "Macs" run Mac OS. PCs don't run Linux, Unix, Solaris, etc.; each of those is a "machine" or "box."

      Also, "gay" used to mean "happy." Nowadays, it means "Mac user." (I kid, I kid.)

      --
      i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
    10. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Spykk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Or maybe they were just forced into that moniker by Apple's "Mac vs PC" ads. If you really need this to be a conspiracy you should probably start with Apple.

    11. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would say it's Apple that perpetuates the "PC" misnomer. Just look at their ads. Also ask any Mac user if they are using a "PC". My guess is their response will be 'no'.

      I see MS using "PC" as a direct response to Apple's ads.

    12. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I saw that as a reaction to the "I'm a mac, I'm a PC" series rather than trying to associate themselves as a PC. Apple's ad made that association first. The fact that MS didn't bother to correct that is just icing for them

    13. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes but the Apple ads also called everything not 'Mac' a 'PC', yet implied that all these 'PC's ran Vista and that this was horrible. When in fact an 'Apple' is a 'PC' as well.

      The only reason most average people assume 'PC'=Windows is because they have watching all the Apple ads that have told them this, over and over and over.

      So yes your argument is valid against the Microsoft commercials but using your same line of argument it is valid against the Apple commercials.

      Don't accuse one company of tricks in their ads when the company your are defending does the same thing. You can't have your cake and eat it to.

    14. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whats actually weird about the Microsoft ads, is instead of saying "Windows", they call it "a PC".

      This -may- be because for Microsoft, as a business entity, it is a very good thing for people to view "PC" and "Windows" as one in the same.

      This is brand association. Its the same way people refer to "drinking a coke." They could be drinking mountain dew, pepsi, sprite, etc. Most people refer to carbonated soft drinks as "coke." Brand association is very good for companies.

      From a technological stand point, limiting options and choices is a bad thing. I agree that a PC != Windows and it very well should not. Unfortunately, for most people, choices just cause confusion.

    15. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is guilty of putting forward the same misconception. You might even say they started it with the "I'm a mac and I'm a PC " commercials.

    16. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by adiposity · · Score: 1

      Generally speaking, consumers have two choices: an Apple, or one of many x86 based-computers that fall under the general classification "IBM-PC compatible" which has essentially defined the Microsoft OS-running computers since the beginning.

      Apple calls their computers "Macs".

      The generally accepted term for the others is "PC".

      Since the vast majority of Windows licenses are purchased for/because of these PCs, it's clear which side Microsoft wants to be on. More Macs purchased equals fewer Microsoft licenses. That's the pragmatic reasoning for the approach.

      I suppose Microsoft could call it a "computer running Microsoft Windows." But the bottom line is, "PC" is the easily identifiable phrase that means this same thing to *most* people (due not in small part to the Mac vs. PC commercials). And that "PC" brand/idea has been tarnished by the Apple commercials. Microsoft is trying to fight back.

      As far as what you can install on a piece of hardware, you can install Linux on an apple or pc, you can install windows on an apple or pc, and you can install OSX on an apple or PC. The difficulty varies for each of these, but it seems pretty obvious which the average person would choose for which OS (to me, at least).

      And none of this changes the fact that most PCs run Windows, most Macs run OSX and most Linux laptop users are paying Microsoft's license fee anyway! And more "PC"s sold equals more money for Microsoft. So why would they shy away from this choice of names?

      -Dan

    17. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      If our theoretical end-user who just wants a web-browser and photo organizer is savvy enough to understand that he doesn't want to be part of a botnet, that same end-user is savvy enough to download any of a number of free antivirus programs that prevent becoming part of a botnet (alternatively, they're savvy enough to not do anything sufficiently idiotic to get a virus in the first place).

      Protip: If you don't want a virus, make sure you run antivirus, don't go to porn sites (but if you do, don't download "codecs"), and don't pirate software (especially not via p2p networks).

      If you follow those three pieces of advice, you'll almost never get a virus. (It has worked for me for years... I don't see why it should be different for anyone else.) I'm not saying that the aforementioned activities always result in virus infestations, I'm simply saying that in my experience, most virus infestations are a direct result of one of the aforementioned activities. Anecdotal evidence, YMMV, etc.

      Oh, and implying that Mac desktops are comparable in price to Windows desktops is just silly. I just priced a Dell Vostro 420 with the same specs as a base iMac and the Vostro is $461 cheaper. Both machines come with 20" monitors, but the Vostro has a better (read: not integrated) video card. The Vostro has a quad core 2.66GHz processor instead of the iMac's dual core 2.66GHz processor. The Vostro has 3GB of RAM instead of the iMac's 2GB, though the iMac uses 1066MHz DDR2 instead of 800MHz DDR2.

      When your iMac's total price is $1199, a $461 savings is extremely significant - it's 38%! How does that justify your claim that "there probably won't be a price difference"?

      Another protip: don't buy "bargain sh*tbox PC"s, as you seem to have done. Buy new parts (and, if necessary, an OEM XP cd) from newegg or mwave or somewhere, and build the machine yourself. You'll save money and get a better machine.

    18. Re:What's weird about those Microsoft ads by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 1

      It's strange that they use the same words as their target audience? You might not use it like that, but someone who accepts that sometimes a computer just "eats" documents, that's how they work, like having a random number generator deciding when to fail a disk write, this person would use it that way.

      That's not weird at all.

  20. Microsoft still doesn't get it by Lord+Grey · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From Roger Kay's blithering:

    And even if you're still willing to pay extra-- sometimes a lot extra -- for cool -- that diaphanous, ephemeral quality -- the coolness gap will largely evaporate this year when Windows 7 is introduced. Already Windows 7 is showing itself to be a far more worthy competitor for Mac OS X than Vista was. In beta now, speculation is that Windows 7 may release to market in early summer, perhaps soon enough to ship on machines by back-to-school season and certainly by holiday. At that point, the Apple premium will come into greater focus.

    There are so many things to pick at Kay's article, but that one point is a decent representative example. "Apple has done something we haven't been able to duplicate yet, but we think we've got it this time. Really! Not like last time, not at all."

    --
    // Beyond Here Lie Dragons
    1. Re:Microsoft still doesn't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words it took Windows almost a decade to come close to Apple and may still miss the mark?

      If you try to match MS and Apple products you'll find that with Windows 7 MS and CO will still miss the mark. All that is being shown is that you get less for le$$ and this argument is one that Microsoft will lose.

    2. Re:Microsoft still doesn't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reminds me of a press release with either Ballmer or Gates. Around the time of the G4 Cube, MS had a press release saying "Our market research shows us that our customers like the simplicity of the cube design". Unfortunately I can't find a link, since I don't remember who the manufacturer was. Just another instance of "Apple did something we haven't yet, but here's our imitation, running Windows which means it's better"

    3. Re:Microsoft still doesn't get it by HeavyDevelopment · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I picked up on that too in the white paper. LMAO when I read it. I've played with Windows 7, and while graphically slicker than Vista....it's still really Vista. Or is that Mohave? I get them confused ;)

      If it squawks like an albatross, walks like an albatross, it's still an albatross.

      --
      Badges!?! We don't need no stinking badges!
    4. Re:Microsoft still doesn't get it by mgiuca · · Score: 1

      So many things to pick at ... damn straight. What sort of shitty "report" is this?

      Using the word "cool" as a noun, and the word "briefest", quoting his mother, ... my god, this is awful!

      And, oh, by the way, is it really so cool, while we're at it?

      So, why, again, was the Mac so much cooler? Oh, the CEO was a better public speaker. And? Uh, the system never crashes. Right, Windows has that, and? The plastics are prettier. Have you seen the XPS One? The Mac boots right up. That right? Shall we benchmark?

      The word "cool" appears TWENTY FIVE TIMES in an eleven-page report.

      This reads like a crappy fourth grade report. I'm ignoring the facts ... just the writing alone really gets me.

  21. No surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft failed to grasp the fact that people talked about the Microsoft Tax because they had to pay for Windows even if they did not use it. The premium you pay for getting a Mac is the same as you would pay for any other brand name.

  22. Apple Tax by CritterNYC · · Score: 1

    Of course there is an Apple tax, there always has been. It's easier to see now that Apple is building their computers using the same processors that PCs are. You can get the equivalent components in a PC for around 70% of the cost of the Mac basically across the board. But Macs have some things the PC doesn't (the Mac 'style', the magnetic power cord, the unibody constructions of the higher end notebooks... and then there's Mac OS X). If someone wants a Mac, they buy a Mac. If they don't care about the OS or the style and just have specific requirements (most hardware for the $, just the usual web/email/documents, a 17" laptop under $1,000, a netbook, etc) they buy a PC.

    1. Re:Apple Tax by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      You can get the equivalent components in a PC for around 70% of the cost of the Mac basically across the board

      Except, in most cases, you really can't. The article on The Register addressing this tried to find a Dell that was the same specs as the Mac in the original article and cheaper, but couldn't. They found one that had slightly lower specs and cost around $500 more.

      What you can find is a lower-spec'd PC that omits features you may not care about for less. A lot of people, for example, don't care about FireWire 800, 802.11n, or ExpressCard, or dual-layer DVD-RW, and a machine lacking these can easily be cheaper.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Apple Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can build a cheap computer on your own, using off-the-shelf parts. But find an equivalent, finished computer from anyone else and you'll see that the costs are close.

      And for laptops, 'equivalent' means that they would wrestle in the same weight class. Having the fat kid come in and fall on you and declare himself the 'winner' isn't going to cut it.

    3. Re:Apple Tax by prockcore · · Score: 1

      and vice versa. I want a machine with built-in card readers. That rules out every mac ever made.

    4. Re:Apple Tax by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      The article on The Register addressing this tried to find a Dell that was the same specs as the Mac in the original article and cheaper, but couldn't. They found one that had slightly lower specs and cost around $500 more.

      Then the author of that article was a blind idiot. Over the last four years, I have found that Dell machines are consistently around $600 cheaper than equivalent Apple machines. (I spend a few hours every four months or so pricing Apples and Dells just to see if things have changed. They haven't, yet.)

    5. Re:Apple Tax by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Sorry to reply to myself, but I wanted to add that if you buy the parts and build the machine yourself, you can save even more than that (except in the "extremely low end" market, but Apple doesn't compete there so it's irrelevant).

  23. Vista... by MikeRT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For many people, even if Apple's prices are high, they're preferable to a typical Vista-based PC for reasons similar to why it's better to live in overly taxed Europe than under-taxed Africa.

    1. Re:Vista... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Insightful? I think suggesting that having to use Windows is remotely comparable to poor conditions in developing countries is outright offensive.

      And I see no justification for the analogy anyway. Here, let me try: I'd rather use Windows, it's like living in a Europe with low taxes and where I make lots of money, as opposed to an African country with high taxes and where everyone is dying of plague. See, if we can merely make assertions of what an OS is comparable to, it's easy!

    2. Re:Vista... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think suggesting that having to use Windows is remotely comparable to poor conditions in developing countries is outright offensive.

      Which is why we need a -1 Big Puss mod for posts like yours. Get over yourself.

    3. Re:Vista... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In which country do you think people are dying of plague?

    4. Re:Vista... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Which is why we need a -1 Big Puss mod for posts like yours. Get over yourself.

      Says the one who's complaining about my post. We evidently need a -1 Big Puss mod for posts like yours. Get over yourself.

      And if you if you really have nothing better to do than troll, and have nothing to add to the discussion, at least have the decency to log in.

    5. Re:Vista... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I've no idea. I was just making up an analogy, just like the OP was.

  24. What gets me... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is Apple for years has made outrageous claims about performance and productivity (remember the intel snail ads? You don't? Here's a reminder...). I won't even talk about the wierd and inaccurate claims they make in their mac vs. pc ads.

    But Microsoft (who has been quiet for ages!) makes one or two not even dubious claims (whoa - macs cost more - big news) and everyone gets all bent out of shape.

    1. Re:What gets me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now, Steve, don't go throwing any chairs ...

      [God I hate astroturfers.]

    2. Re:What gets me... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      I'm actually unemployed :/.

      Its true though - back when the Mac II was top of the line Apple sales people use to come by school and do comparison demos.

      They'd have a 10,000$ maxed out Mac and an IBM PC with two floppy drives (I really wish I was making this up...).

      Both companies do this, but I really honestly think Apple has been doing it wayyyy longer - get over it.

    3. Re:What gets me... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Microsoft has not been quiet for ages. For the past decade, they have been making one false claim after another about using Linux -- always centered around the idea that there is some sort of hidden cost that will bite you later on if you use Linux. What makes this newsworthy is that Microsoft has changed their focus -- they are now more afraid of Apple than the Linux crowd (again).

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    4. Re:What gets me... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      What I mean about quiet is TV ads, and no - they've only been really making TV ads this last year or so, where as Apple you can view all their own advertisements on Youtube going back to the 80's.

    5. Re:What gets me... by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      Not only that, but few people other than the 400 Linux users would have heard anything about the Microsoft-Linux stuff.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
    6. Re:What gets me... by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Intel, for a long time, was a dog when it came to the amount of work each cycle could do. In assembly you had to fetch from memory, operate, write to memory. The number of cycles to do this was greater than on say, a 68K. For a while this advantage was held by the PPC. This was the battle between CISC and RISC. Most of the claim made of Apple were made to correct claims made by Intel, that somehow clock speed was a reliable metric, and claims made by other white box manufacturers, that clock speed, memory, and number of ports defined the speed of the computer. Not only does the hardware architecture make a huge difference, but do does the OS.

      To put this in perspective, I did significant work on Apples and PCs. It was almost 1990 before the PC was up to the performance level of the Mac in Excel and the like. Even to the mid 90's I still used the Mac for visualization. I believe this was due not only to simple things, like the lack of graphics chip, but other issue like the fucked up memory model and, of course, the inefficient chip.

      Intel, leaving the x86 behind, now has fixed the problem by creating hybrid chips. This also allowed them to compete with AMD. So the snail ad is not longer valid. Neither is the caveman ad when MS put out Windows NT. NT eventually became pretty good and XP was nice.

      For the most part the claims still make some sense. I was able to play movies on my mac long before it was simple to do so on the PC. Importing DV movies, which require firewire, was easy to do on all machines post 2002. Editing movies became easy about three years ago.

      Obviously if one never need the high power killer applications, the the PC makes a lot of sense, and paying for power you don't need makes no sense. Alternatively, if you have the skill, you can build a powerful machine and install a *nix and get a workhorse for very cheap, not counting you time. But the number of people who can do this are small.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    7. Re:What gets me... by ph0rk · · Score: 1

      MS is/was the near monopoly. Which means, fair or not, competitors can say and do things that people could cry foul on MS for.

      --
      semantics are everything!
    8. Re:What gets me... by UnknowingFool · · Score: 3, Informative

      At the time the G3 was technically a faster processor than the Pentium II according to the BYTEmark test. "Apple says that a PowerMac G3/300 scores 10.2 on the BYTEmark test, more than twice as fast as the 4.3 rating the Pentium II got, and 45 percent higher than a 400-MHz Pentium II." Now it's debatable whether the computer was overall faster as then you have to factor in bus speeds, memory, etc. Back then these things mattered a lot. The main point was at the minimum it was debatable and not blatantly false.

      This comparison done by MS is dishonest at best. For example, for desktops it compares a Xeon class workstation MacPro to a generic consumer desktop Core 2 Duo and complains that the MacPro was much more expensive. Well, duh: a workstation meant for professionals is going to cost you more than a consumer desktop. That's just common sense. Also it includes paying for software like Office and Quicken on the Mac but don't include them in the cost of the PC. It compared old versions of Mac products with the newest PC counterparts etc. It added optional MobileMe Apple services but didn't for PCs, etc.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    9. Re:What gets me... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      They'd have a 10,000$ maxed out Mac and an IBM PC with two floppy drives (I really wish I was making this up...).

      So what you're saying is...companies try to show their products as superior to the competition? I'm sure your Nobel Prize will arrive by FedEx any day now.

    10. Re:What gets me... by Rockoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In assembly you had to fetch from memory, operate, write to memory. The number of cycles to do this was greater than on say, a 68K.

      liar liar pants on fire.

      What you are claiming is that on Intel, you have to do this:

      mov eax, [foo]
      add eax, ebx
      mov [foo], eax

      Yeah... you CAN do that... but you can also do:

      add [foo], ebx

      omg where did your bullshit arguement go? drink the punch much there, fanboi?

      The CISC vs RISC debate was never about what you imagine. The reason RISC was so attractive was because it *didn't* have the option of that second method.. that second method is "complex" .. its a read/modify/write instruction and risc machines don't do that because RISC machines were all about MHZ.

      RISC became popular precisely because they could crank up those MHZ .. the Alpha being the star of the show.

      You just declared exactly the opposite of what was going on back then. The PPC failed precisely because it was an underpowered piece of crap. It was RISC without the performance advantage of RISC. The alpha was performance king when it clocked (MHZ) at 1.5x to 2.0x faster than Intel's offerings. The PPC couldnt boast that. The only folks who didnt notice were Apple and their fanbois

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    11. Re:What gets me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was there really a time when Microsoft was more concerned with Linux than Mac?

    12. Re:What gets me... by willy_me · · Score: 1

      What you are claiming is that on Intel, you have to do this:

      mov eax, [foo]
      add eax, ebx
      mov [foo], eax

      Yeah... you CAN do that... but you can also do:

      add [foo], ebx

      Now I'm not saying that you are completely out to lunch, but an instruction does not make for a cycle. Any instruction in a CISC processor can take multiple cycles - so the example you provided is really not valid. In fact, when converted into micro-ops, the two examples could easily be the same (depending on the CPU.)

    13. Re:What gets me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the time the G3 was technically a faster processor than the Pentium II according to the BYTEmark test. "Apple says that a PowerMac G3/300 scores 10.2 on the BYTEmark test, more than twice as fast as the 4.3 rating the Pentium II got, and 45 percent higher than a 400-MHz Pentium II."

      Note that those were scores for BYTEmark INTEGER, just one part of a benchmark test that was outdated even by 1998 standards. Also, it was never really useful for desktops. It was more of a server/workstation benchmark.

      Now it's debatable whether the computer was overall faster as then you have to factor in bus speeds, memory, etc.

      Even CNN covered Apple's inflated claims: "BYTE, which suspended publication in May, posted a FAQ on its Web site explaining that the Power Mac had superior performance on a particular type of integer test. The magazine noted that the Pentium II bested the Power Mac on some other tests that employ full-blown applications to test other subsystems such as storage. It cited differences in software compilers as another factor in the Power Mac's ability to run the test faster."

    14. Re:What gets me... by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

      But... people did get bent out of shape over the snail ads. This is the world's-most-famous-longest-lived-flamewar-ever. And the media is delighted to sell you whichever side of the story makes you most likely to

      1. buy their stupid magazine or
      2. read their stupid advertisements.

      Obviously, that means they are happy to give you both sides of the flamewar, and not much else.

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    15. Re:What gets me... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      At the time the G3 was technically a faster processor than the Pentium II according to the BYTEmark test [techimo.com]. "Apple says that a PowerMac G3/300 scores 10.2 on the BYTEmark test, more than twice as fast as the 4.3 rating the Pentium II got, and 45 percent higher than a 400-MHz Pentium II." Now it's debatable whether the computer was overall faster as then you have to factor in bus speeds, memory, etc. Back then these things mattered a lot. The main point was at the minimum it was debatable and not blatantly false.

      Apple was infamous for singling out some specific benchmark they happened to do well in back in the day, and then try to claim that their CPU was 3 times faster or some nonsense like that. Sure, it was for some specific thing, but if you combed through the numbers enough, you would be sure to find some metric where the Pentium was 3 times faster than the PPC. It was misleading at best.

      Of course, the funniest is how Apple went from something like '2x faster than a Pentium 4' to 'now 5 times faster than before' with the Intel switch. Yeah, we all know the Core Duos were faster than the Pentium 4, but even Intel wasn't claiming they were 10 times faster.

    16. Re:What gets me... by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      Cycle counts died with super-scaler architectures. This is true for both CISC and RISC machines.

      Its now all about latencies and throughputs. Let me explain.

      The x86 line of processors has an "add reg, reg" instruction. On an AMD64 in the naive world of cycle counts, this instruction takes 3 clock cycles. In the specs you will see that its "latency" is 3 cycles, and that exactly means that from the time this instructions operands are ready, that the result will be ready exactly 3 cycles later.

      But an AMD64 is not limited to 1 addition every 3 clock cycles. The throughput for this instruction is actualy 3. The AMD64 can execute 3 additions per clock cycle.

      This is explained based on two factors.

      First, realize that the addition itself only takes 1 clock cycle.. the other two cycles are in setting up and retiring the execution of it. Both setup and retirement are independent steps, such that immediately after the integer execution unit performs its 1-cycle addition it can perform another one. The execution unit can handle 1 addition every clock cycle, even though the overall latency of addition is 3 cycles

      Second, realize that the AMD64 has 3 integer execution units. That each of these execution units can handle 1 addition per clock cycle.

      Thus, as the tech specs will tell you (or Agner Fog's fine docs), this addition operation has a 3 cycle latency but a 3-additions-cycle throughput.

      Now back to CISC vs RISC. It seems "obvious" that both should be able to benefit from super-scaler architecture, and that is true.

      The problem for RISC is that the execution time of a piece of code is the sum of the latencies of the instructions in the longest dependency chain. (a dependency chain is a sequence of instructions where each depends on the result of the previous instruction.) RISC architectures were able to crank up the MHZ by simply making the latency of an instruction longer. So while a typical 200mhz Pentium 2 latency was 3 cycles, it was 6 for the 400mhz Alpha.

      In real world scenarios, there is an awfull lot of dead time where only a single dependency chain is left, and thats where most of the benefits of RISC evaporates. Both the 200mhz CISC and the 400mhz RISC machine each took the same real-world time to execute that longest dependency chain, because they both used the same sized transistors to perform the same sequence of operations.

      This isn't to say that Intel isnt guilty of cranking up the MHZ by extending latencies .. the pentium 4 was basically cranked-up in the same way that RISC machines were cranked up .. Its instruction latencies were much longer than AMD64's, so even though Intel had the MHZ edge, the AMD64 actualy performed on par, and in many ways better, with a lower clock speed.

      There are real advantages to RISC (manufacturing cost and power efficiency) .. but in real world scenarios, performance was never one of them.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    17. Re:What gets me... by willy_me · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the reply, I appreciate the answer. But I am fully aware of the fact the modern CPUs operate in a manner very different from our old processors. My only point was that the example you gave did nothing to prove your point. The only reason I found it necessary to point it out was because of the rude and immature nature of your response. Your reply to me was great, but I'm sure if you look at your previous post you will agree that it comes off as being the opposite of polite.

      With respect to the content of your posts, I think we are both on the same page. But I do not totally agree with everything you have said. I believe that RISC was *faster then CISC - up until they essentially merged into one. Now the argument is moot. The overhead incurred by CISC and advantages offered by RISC are negligible in a modern processor.

      *faster - By faster I am referring to the fact that given x transistors, a RISC architecture will generally outperform a CISC architecture. This assumes a similar R&D budget for both architectures. I am also referring to a previous point in time - around the 90s.

    18. Re:What gets me... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      Well I've been in a lot of sales meetings since I was there, but I've never seen any so lop sided - seriously.

      Comparing a Mac II with a ton of disk space and cool add-on cards to a PC with no HDD and dual floppies challenged belief.

    19. Re:What gets me... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Comparing a Mac II with a ton of disk space and cool add-on cards to a PC with no HDD and dual floppies challenged belief.

      Uh huh. And could you even get an equivalent PC if you spent $10,000? And isn't this coming up on 30 years ago - hold grudges much?

    20. Re:What gets me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh - yes. RISC processors were the way of the future and Intel x86 wouldn't be able to keep up. And I believed it.

      Apparently the original 1984 Mac had to have extra ram installed to run the demo at the product launch :-) (according to Stephen Levy in Insanely Great).

      Now if you will excuse me, I have an Apple Anonymous meeting to attend.

  25. Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Dystopian+Rebel · · Score: 4, Funny

    Software Installation Reboot Tax
    Virus Tax
    Anti-Virus Installation Reboot Tax
    MS Word Document Corruption And Formatting Instability Tax
    MS Office 2007 UI Redesign Tax
    Windows Genuine Advantage Tax
    Windows Update Reboot Tax
    DRM Tax
    Internet Explorer Web Deficiencies Tax
    Idiotic Advertising Campaigns Tax
    Ballmer Squirt Tax

    --
    Rich And Stupid is not so bad as Working For Rich And Stupid.
    1. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by BlitzTech · · Score: 4, Informative

      You forgot:

      Office 2007 -> Office 2003 Incompatibility Tax
      Reformat Every Six Months To Actually Clean The Registry Tax
      Call Microsoft Every Time You Have To Reformat Tax
      UAC Windows Popping Up All The Freaking Time Tax

      Just to name a few.

    2. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Ballmer Squirt Tax was the hardest to swallow.

    3. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Sechr+Nibw · · Score: 1

      Stress Relief Tax
      Driver Update Tax
      Driver Reboot Tax
      Stress Relief Tax
      Malware Tax
      Malware Reboot-into-safe-mode Tax
      Malware Reboot-into-normal-mode Tax
      Stress Relief Tax

    4. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the Ballmer Chair-Throwing Tax

    5. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by c · · Score: 1

      > Ballmer Squirt Tax

      Now, you do have to admit that the Zune marketing team probably got hit (squirted?) more for that tax than anyone else.

      c.

      --
      Log in or piss off.
    6. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software Installation Reboot Tax
      Virus Tax
      Anti-Virus Installation Reboot Tax
      MS Word Document Corruption And Formatting Instability Tax
      MS Office 2007 UI Redesign Tax
      Windows Genuine Advantage Tax
      Windows Update Reboot Tax
      DRM Tax
      Internet Explorer Web Deficiencies Tax
      Idiotic Advertising Campaigns Tax
      Ballmer Squirt Tax

      iPhone Tax
      iMovie Tax
      iWork Tax
      iTunes Tax
      FairPlay Tax
      Safari No-Phishing Filter Tax
      Shiny and New Tax
      Sony Style Tax
      Inoperable Tax
      Steve Blue Jean Tax
      You Will Accept Whatever Steve Gives You Tax
      No BlueRay Tax
      One Mouse Button Tax
      No Games Tax
      iMac Non-Upgradable Hardware Tax

      See... We Can Be Petty Too Tax

    7. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      + Ballmer Chair Tax

    8. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by ben0207 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And the very real:
      Losing all your work because Windows Update restarted in the middle of the night and you'd forgotten to save and who the FUCK DECIDED TO MAKE THAT THE DEFAULT OPTION?! "YES, PLEASE COMPUTER, PLEASE RESTART WHENEVER YOU FUCKING FEEL LIKE IT HAVING DISPLAYED A POPUP DIALOG FOR 5 FUCKING MINUTES. AND PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT DIALOG MINIMISES ANY FULLSCREEN APPLICATIONS OR GAMES I'M CURRENTLY USING, THAT'S REALLY FUCKING GREAT" I DON'T MIND YOU DOWNLOADING UPDATES IN THE BACKGROUND, AND I'M SORT OF GLAD THAT YOU'RE SET TO UPDATE BY DEFAULT, BUT WHY, FUCKING WHY, DO YOU NEED TO RESTART EVERY TEN FUCKING SECONDS?.... ...tax.

      Sorry, got a bit carried away there (having left my computer on with a Photoshop document I'd spend 4 hours on without saving yesterday, only to find my computer now has a security patch for software I never use and a distinct lack of my work.)

      --
      cmd-q.co.uk - some sort of stupid fucking internet bullshit
    9. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no no... you've got it all wrong. Those aren't Microsoft _taxes_, they're Microsoft _features_!!

      See, the developers thought highly enough of you to include those items for your enjoyment!

    10. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by roscolaw · · Score: 0

      Not that I disagree with any of these, but Apple has similar issues in some cases, including their update reboots (duh) and even DRM - http://mobile.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/19/2218217

    11. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1, Troll

      Leaving your computer running with unsaved work unattended for several hours is... um, how to put it mildly... doubleplus-unsmart, regardless of platform/OS/whatever you're using, and any other factors. Really. There's no excuse for doing that sort of thing.

    12. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Office 2007 -> Office 2003 Incompatibility Tax

      Office 2007 Compatibility Packs for Office 2000, Office XP, and Office 2003 are free.

      Reformat Every Six Months To Actually Clean The Registry Tax

      You must install a lot of crapware, but there are free utilities that negate the need to reformat just to clean the registry of your crapware installs. One good utility is CCleaner (aka "CrapCleaner").

      Call Microsoft Every Time You Have To Reformat Tax

      I'm assuming you've "misspoken" because this is bullshit. Yes, you may have to call Microsoft if you change enough major hardware components (e.g. motherboard) before you reformat, and this may be annoying, but you don't need to call MS for a simple reformat.

      UAC Windows Popping Up All The Freaking Time Tax

      Again, you must install a lot of crapware that needlessly asks for administrator privileges. Or you must do administrative tasks while logged in as a standard user All The Freaking Time.

    13. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      . . . what word processor do people using macs use again?

      what browser is less secure, time and time again?

    14. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I dunno about everyone else, but I've never had to call Microsoft to reactivate Windows after a reinstall. Maybe I'm just lucky?

    15. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by BlitzTech · · Score: 1

      If you buy Windows separately from your machine, you have to call them and tell them you're reformatting and you need the key. The discs that you get bundled with computers generally don't need that.

    16. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      And exactly what does this do to disprove the GP's very legitimate rant on MS's new policy of restarting your computer for you? Nice straw man there.

      One time in XP I had dragged the "restart now, later" box under my taskbar (used to be able to hide it there for days). In the middle of typing a paper, it went away, and a new box came up that told me it was going to reboot my computer. I had reached the end of a paragraph, hit return twice, and in between hitting it twice the box popped up. Unfortunately the default option is "reboot now", and I did not have time to react to the box; I just saw the window but it was too late; had already hit return the second time.

      Luckily I was able to ctrl+S my paper immediately and type in asdf.doc and save it wherever the default directory was.

      It seems now, in XP at least, if you tell it "restart later" it never asks you again and just waits for you to reboot your computer (I hit "later" and ended up rebooting 3 days later; didn't prompt me anymore in the times between). I can deal with this.

      I've since completely turned off auto updates. I'll just remember to check every few months. I can't risk my computer rebooting on me in the middle of the night. For one, Windows is not my default loaded operating system in the boot menu.

    17. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      And exactly what does this do to disprove the GP's very legitimate rant on MS's new policy of restarting your computer for you? Nice straw man there.

      For the record, there's no such policy. When Vista is installed, one of the installer screens is Windows Update settings. You can disable auto-updates right there and then, or you can pick the option where it downloads them and then asks your confirmation to install. The option that is checked by default (and labeled "Recommended") is indeed to do everything on full auto, but the text clearly explains what it will do - in particular, that it will auto-install and reboot at 3am. I wouldn't say that it's particularly sneaky.

      One time in XP I had dragged the "restart now, later" box under my taskbar (used to be able to hide it there for days). In the middle of typing a paper, it went away, and a new box came up that told me it was going to reboot my computer. I had reached the end of a paragraph, hit return twice, and in between hitting it twice the box popped up. Unfortunately the default option is "reboot now", and I did not have time to react to the box; I just saw the window but it was too late; had already hit return the second time.

      Yes, I remember that one, and it was, indeed, extremely annoying, and with high risk of data loss. Gladly this was replaced in Vista.

      It seems now, in XP at least, if you tell it "restart later" it never asks you again and just waits for you to reboot your computer (I hit "later" and ended up rebooting 3 days later; didn't prompt me anymore in the times between).

      As far as I remember, in XP it does pop up again every now and then (the text of the dialog actually says that it will do that), and the time period between every pop up is fixed to something like an hour. I vividly remember that as I kept clicking on "Later", and then getting it pop up right in my face while I was typing something... tadam, reboot. Vista at least doesn't steal focus (it's a tray baloon, not a system modal dialog there), and allows me to set the time period for "later" up to 4 hours - though I sure wish I could just say "fsck off please, I'll reboot when I want".

      Also, Vista doesn't just close everything when you click reboot. If there are any applications with unsaved documents or other data (about which they should tell the OS, since there is a standard and well-documented mechanism of doing so), then you'll see a list of such applications, and suggestion to either cancel the reboot, or proceed with killing the apps at the risk of data loss. There is no countdown timer in that case - it will sit there and wait for user to interfere. This applies both to regular user-initiated reboots, and Windows Update automatic reboots.

      Of course, many Windows application developers are lazy, or simply don't know that they're supposed to actually write some code to cover such cases (which again boils down to "lazy", since it's well-documented in MSDN and elsewhere).

    18. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Need what key? Every retail copy of Windows I've ever purchased has come with the license key attached. XP just reactivates over the internet automatically after a reinstall, using the same license key. Sure, if you do it six times in a row they'll start denying the activation request, but they're pretty lenient about it.

    19. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by BlitzTech · · Score: 1

      Hmm. Every time I've done a reinstall off a separately-purchased disc, I've had to call in and tell them so I could activate; conversely, whenever I've done an install off a bundled disc, I've never had a problem. Maybe I'm just lucky... or unlucky. I can't decide which one it is.

    20. Re:Hidden Microsoft Taxes I Have Paid by k-macjapan · · Score: 1

      Not to belittle your experience or anything, but you know you can turn this functionality off.

      Control Panel - Windows Update - Change settings.

  26. microsoft sponsored report by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do you really need to know more than that?

  27. Priceless by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    So,they think that how many years after the release of OSX they finally got a windows that might be able to compete?

    You got to have your head very deeply insides balmer digestive tract to think the quote above is a good way to describe your own product.

    Kay doesn't just drink the coolaid, he slurps it straight from Ballmers wiener.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Priceless by russotto · · Score: 1

      So,they think that how many years after the release of OSX they finally got a windows that might be able to compete?

      Microsoft just can't help it. They know, deep down inside, that Apple is better. If they squint and rationalize and hem and haw and run old versions, they can convince themselves that they really are better than Linux, but they just can't do that with the Mac (or the iPod, for that matter -- consider that little film they made about "if Microsoft made the iPod packaging). So they're reduced to statements which end up sounding like "we're good enough this time, really", and "those bastards may be better, but they cost a bit more".

    2. Re:Priceless by Megane · · Score: 1

      The sad thing is that Microsoft is doing what Apple (fortunately) failed to do in the '90s. Apple was trying to re-write the old MacOS with the Copland project. That wasn't their only project to write a new OS, just the one that tried to be the "NT of MacOS". If it had succeeded, Apple would have had yet another unique operating system written from scratch (just like Be) and wouldn't have had the advantage of leveraging the Unix base that they got from NeXT.

      Now Microsoft is trying to re-NT their NT operating system. In the end they'll have something not entirely unlike what they had before, but different enough to force everybody to upgrade yet again. Until the users revolt, that is. All the people who still insist upon getting XP are just a start.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    3. Re:Priceless by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      Actually they don't. From the reviews I've read so far, Windows 7 is more like Vista SP3. As in, the proverbial third service pack that finally brings a mature product ;-) And backwards compatibility is still king.

      If Microsoft wanted to do something revolutionary, they'd try to push this: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/singularity/. But that would mean giving up the greatest advantage of Windows, the huge base of existing and windows-compatible software.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
    4. Re:Priceless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind, Microsoft purchased the company that made VirtualPC. I honestly expected Vista to totally break backwards compatibility on the native OS, then use VirtualPC containers of some kind to run old apps. That method would work because they could actually ship each copy of Windows New with copies of enough of Windows 95, 98, NT4, 2000, xp, 2003, Vista, etc. to let users run VMs with the apps for that version. All it would take is destroying the normal virtual disk system and replacing it with something like chroot.

    5. Re:Priceless by Lonewolf666 · · Score: 1

      There were some rumors that they would do something like that. And something like a .NET only environment with VirtualPC containers for older software might actually have been a good idea. It would have allowed Microsoft to simplify their set of APIs, stuffing the old ones into an environment that is somewhat decoupled from the rest.
      But in the end, even that was obviously too daring for Microsoft management.

      --
      C - the footgun of programming languages
  28. crap, misposted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    was trying to post this as a top level comment. Downmod, please.

  29. Nothing to see here. Move along by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    Microsoft releasing less than honest information about a competitor? And it backfires as people call them out for dishonesty? Wow that's never happened before. Microsoft doesn't seem to learn from their mistakes do they?

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  30. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    Note that the 5 licenses only apply to computers owned by the same family and in the same house. If you read the license it does not cover, for example, a Mac owned by a child who has gone to university (or, at least, didn't last time I read the license, which was about two years ago - feel free to correct me if I'm wrong about this). I don't know many people who own more than 2 Macs, and so the five license thing could just as well be an unlimited site license for personal use. For most people it is not particularly good value. Now, a few years ago when the family license for iLife was (briefly) the same price as the single license, things were different. I own two Macs, but one of them still runs Tiger because I didn't want to pay for Leopard on it and I got the very-cheap - around $20 - upgrades for both machines by buying them just before the new OS was announced.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  31. Did I miss something? by Shrike82 · · Score: 1

    Who was honestly expecting an unbiased report on Apple products when it says on the first page "Sponsor: Microsoft"?

    Did you think Microsoft would approve publication of something they paid for that didn't put their own products in a better light than Apple's? People seem shocked by something that (to me) should have been clear from the very start. Or am I being too simplistic?

    --
    You can advertise in this sig from as little as £99.99 a month!
    1. Re:Did I miss something? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Depends. In some places, we have truth in advertising laws. If you say something about a competitor's product, it has to be true. Apple had to withdraw some adverts because they made unsubstantiated claims about Microsoft products, and Microsoft should be held to the same standards. If they claim an equivalent Mac is more expensive, then they need to be able to justify this. Comparing a Core 2 Dell against a Xeon Mac is not a fair comparison, as the article in El Reg demonstrated; the Dell with almost identical hardware (slightly smaller hard disk) was $500 more expensive. This is not just spin, it is outright dishonesty.

      The previous Microsoft adverts were much better. They didn't try to claim that they were cheaper, they pointed out that there were a lot of niches where Apple has no equivalent product. This is entirely true. My last two computers have been Macs, but if I look at their current product line I don't see anything that fits the niche that I fit in.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they claim an equivalent Mac is more expensive, then they need to be able to justify this

      They don't claim this, though!
      Specifically, they claim that Macs are more expensive. Nowhere in there is 'equivalent'.

      Slashdot obligatory: If Kia comes out with an ad saying that their Kia Whatever is "less than a tenth the price of a Porsche 911!", it doesn't matter that the Kia Whatever isn't even close to 'equivalent'. It matters that the $150,000 Porsche is 10x more expensive than the $14,999 Kia Whatever.

      In other words, Apple doesn't go after the low end. Plenty of Windows-based computer companies do. A Mac Mini is more expensive than a Dell Studio, and Dell has dozens of lines of computers in between that and Apple's next-lowest line of computers. And, if all you really need is "cheap computer for basic tasks"...

    3. Re:Did I miss something? by ignavus · · Score: 1

      If they claim an equivalent Mac is more expensive, then they need to be able to justify this.

      I would never claim that a Mac is more expensive than an equivalent Windows PC (or even Linux PC).

      I would claim that there ARE no equivalent Macs for the PCs I can buy - much cheaper than any Mac.

      A Rolls Royce may be value-for-money, for all I know, and it may last for decades and keep its resale value. But I don't NEED a Rolls Royce for the things I use a car for (i.e. I am not transporting royalty or billionaires). My 5-year old cheapy desktop box running Debian Testing still meets my needs for surfing the web, programming, and watching DVDs and TV.

      And I can easily spec out a new box that is much cheaper than the Mac Mini and yet has more storage, more RAM and a faster CPU - and the entire software range of Linux at the touch of a mouse (in synaptic). That is why I don't bother with Macs - they are Rolls Royces.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    4. Re:Did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Microsoft ads do not say an equivalent Mac is more expensive. They say that for what is important to these buyers that the Mac is more expensive. If a buyer doesn't care about the name, or OS X, or the case then a PC is usually less expensive.
      I pretty much did the ad thing with my son saying he could have between 500-600 for a computer. My son built his own PC last year for a little over 500 dollars with 19 inch wide screen flat monitor, 650 gig hd, 4 gig ram, graphics card, keyboard, etc. He has Windows 7 running on it for an OS. A Mac Mini is more $ and comes with less ram, smaller hard disk, no keyboard/mouse ... At the low end, where many consumers buy, the PC is simply less expensive.

  32. Linux Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Being an avid Linux user, I fully admit there is a linux tax. Lets see, I make roughly $18/hour. To build, install and trouble shoot a machine until it is running the way I like takes me probably on average an hour. So that is roughly an $18 dollar tax for using linux verse OSX or Windows! But the lack of hair restoration from dealing with Windows and the trying to get around the idiot proofing of OSX probably more then makes up for that.
    Of course your 'Tax' may vary but for me I don't mind paying the linux tax.

    1. Re:Linux Tax by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      It's been a while since I installed any OS outside a VM, but last time I installed OS X it took me a couple of hours to get the system fully installed and configured the way I like it. A lot of that was hands-off time (installing the OS from DVD took ages, but I didn't have to sit there watching the progress bar). Last Windows machine I installed was Windows 2000 (so quite a few years ago), but installing it, updating it, and installing all of the apps I wanted took a similarly long time (and included a lot more reboots than installing OS X, Linux, or *BSD ever has, meaning that I had to be sitting in front of the computer for a lot more of the time, rather than just setting it up and returning to it later).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:Linux Tax by Aram+Fingal · · Score: 3, Funny

      Dude, I make almost twice that much per hour to install and troubleshoot Windows. You're in the wrong line of work.

    3. Re:Linux Tax by hattig · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Try applying that tax again when you are older, earning $40+ an hour, have very little free time (late at work again, long commute, etc) and thus your personal time is actually really valuable to you (easily $100+ an hour) and your Linux install/update has a problem with a bit of hardware in your computer that takes 5 hours to sort out.

      The good thing is that these problems with Linux are getting fewer and further between. Most wireless hardware is supported out of the box now (although I had to connect via ethernet with my recent netbook to allow the system to download a binary broadcom driver), the same with graphics adaptors.

    4. Re:Linux Tax by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

      you'd love installing Vista then - it takes hours literally just to go from DVD in drive to working system. Then you have the usual amount of time to turn off the nonsense they've added to it, and install the usual important apps like AV.

      And then the 48 updates (as of today) take another hour to install. I wouldn't mind so much if it was hands-off time, but it asks you questions about the install about half way through.

      It does require less reboots than previous versions though.

    5. Re:Linux Tax by Abreu · · Score: 1

      Where do you live, and how much does a 3 bedroom apartment rent cost there?

      Before you disparage someone about his wages, take in mind that stuff has different prices in different cities

      For example, I make about $1800-2000 US dollars a month, but that's considered middle class in my country... My rent is about $300.00USD

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    6. Re:Linux Tax by Draek · · Score: 1

      The thing I've never understood about these people who claim to have lost $100+ per hour configuring Windows/Linux/Mac/whatever to get it to recognize a specific piece of hardware is, if their time is so valuable, why didn't they just buy a new piece of hardware instead?

      When I was 16, I built a test server out of spare parts and random junk off cheap online auctions. Everything worked nicely, except for the network card which I had found in a closet (probably my dad's), which strangely enough only worked in FreeBSD, neither Linux nor Windows acknowledged its existence. Know what I did? paid $8 for a brand new one with a penguin logo on the box, spent all of 10 minutes removing the old one and replacing it with the new card, and lived happily ever after.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    7. Re:Linux Tax by El_Oscuro · · Score: 1

      It is funny that you should mention hardware compatibility between Windows and Linux. Just in the last few days, I installed iTunes for Windows on a new machine and connected my 4G nano. Nothing. It didn't recognize it at all. Rather than spend several hours troubleshooting it, I tried connecting it to my Ubuntu machine which recognized it immediately. Even better, gtkpod not only had no problems syncing it, but converted my OGG files just fine. I am listening to one now.

      Years ago, the same thing happened with a Kodak camera and F-spot. Linux exclusively manages my photos, and now my iPods too.

      --
      "Be grateful for what you have. You may never know when you may lose it."
    8. Re:Linux Tax by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      So it had Linux drivers? I have to use ndiswrapper with my Broadcom cards, but the drivers were on the CD.

  33. Montreal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hahahahahuha

  34. Chevy Nova by donjefe · · Score: 1

    This is like saying that when you have a BMW, you pay a special BMW tax. We could all buy used Chevy Novas an replace them every year and half, but I fail to see how that would really be cheaper in the long run if your time an grief are worth anything to you.

  35. Tax? by Kjella · · Score: 1

    I thought the entire point of the word tax, as in Microsoft tax, was that it was something you have to pay whether you want it or not. Paying Apple to use OS X isn't a tax. Paying Microsoft to use Windows isn't a tax. Paying Microsoft to use Linux because it's damn difficult to find a similar PC without Windows preinstalled or get a refund is a tax.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Tax? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      The correct word, I believe, is 'premium' but you can't use this when talking about your competitor's products because it makes it sound like they are better than yours.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  36. Read Dvorak for once by olddotter · · Score: 1

    The point John makes (I heard it on Twit.tv podcast as well) is that if you replace Apple with Microsoft, and Microsoft with Linux the argument stands true. Microsoft just told their customer to buy based on cost. Its hard to bet Free on cost, so if people stop and think about this ad campaign, MS is pushing people to Linux.

  37. Apple brought this upon themselves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    with their mud flinging pc (vista) vs mac ad campaign, when they decided to tout their superiority and drag vista (but implying all pc's) though the mud on TV. Apple stores have found themselves situated in malls among designer shops, as thats where they should be, as they are a high priced, high style, "elitist" product line, just as their obnoxious commercials suggest...

    1. Re:Apple brought this upon themselves by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

      There's a truth to what you've said, but...

      My wife is the perfect example of a computer user that just wants to get stuff done without having to know all the details involved.

      We bought her the 12" macbook about four years ago because the size was right and the price was right (it cost us about $800 after her student discount). She still uses that machine today without any complaints. The machine has run like a champ and I've never had to learn how to use it or fix it because she's never run into something that she couldn't figure out on her own.

      There's value in that that you just can't get from a windows laptop.

      There's no way we would have received the same value from an $800 windows laptop if we'd decided to go that route four years ago.

      --

      *sigh* back to work...
  38. It's a computer... by koan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does it do what you need? Can you afford it? Then why worry about it.

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:It's a computer... by cicuz · · Score: 1

      because they want you to think the answer to the latter is "no", moving the attention from the fact that the answer to the former is, for the first time in a really long one, "YES, AND IT FEELS GGOOODD".

    2. Re:It's a computer... by koan · · Score: 1

      I own a mac, they are over priced for what you get, and frankly the entire Apple INC is designed to get even more money out of you after you buy the units..."oh you want those features you have to sign up for mobileme" etc.

      I run Ubuntu, XP, and OS X 10.5.6 at home, so I look for hardware I can afford, and what does the job, I don't get caught up in OS fascism or evangelicalism, and without fail building your own PC gives you a better, faster, less expensive machine than anything you can get from Apple, and you can run OS X on it.

      --
      "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    3. Re:It's a computer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that for some reason beginning your rant with "I own a mac" somehow gave you any credibility?

      If anything, what you said was contradictory. If you always buy hardware you can afford that does the job, and you own a mac, obviously you found a mac that was reasonably price that did the job. Otherwise you wouldn't have bought it. Yet, you also claim that macs are "over priced (sic) for what you get."

      Go troll somewhere else.

  39. Get What Works Best For You by chia_monkey · · Score: 0

    Sometimes these arguments just get old. Other times they're funny as hell. I do get tired of seeing the same damn "justifications" that I've seen over the past decade though (ie, "Macs don't get viruses because nobody uses Macs" or "Macs are just more expensive").

    I've done tech support on both Macs and PCs. Each has its place. For my trusty "I just need to get sh*t done" machine I use a Mac. After work I just want to come home, turn on the computer, use it, and be done for my next thing (eating? drinking?). However, a cheap PC and its plethora of available surplus parts can come in handy. I've got one that I'm using as a home theater PC (granted, the damn thing crapped out on me and I don't know what its deal is yet).

    Keep on fighting fanboys...just make sure you back it up with some factual justifications instead of "oh yeah? You're just a dumb poopyhead".

    --

    "He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
  40. Yes, you are. by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    People expect a certain amount basic honesty from others. If I ask a taxi-driver to take me to location X, I expect him to say if it is just ten meters down the road, not charge me for the ride.

    Is it to unreasonable to expect a company to not outright lie, consitently on facts? Sure, of course Vista is great and will improve your life. But don't claim it boots in 2 seconds when it doesn't. Their is sales talk and their is lying and there is a difference.

    MS, and various other companies have lost sight of this difference and it makes everything they say suspect and on the whole, irritating as hell. Coca Cola is not exactly telling the truth that when you open the can a party comes out, but neither is it claiming Coca Cola is more healthy then fruit juice or a glass of milk.

    MS with this campaign is once again not just trying to show how good there products are but trying to bend facts until they break and claiming it is just advertising. For most of us, there is a limit.

    Compare it to a job interview. If you tell the truth, that you are an average coder, well that is very honest but won't get you hired. Say you are a really good programmer and you might not be to honest but hey, it is a sales pitch and they know it so might hire you hoping for a good programmer. Say you are the best programmer and people will just laugh at you.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Yes, you are. by Shrike82 · · Score: 1

      People expect a certain amount basic honesty from others.

      Can't say I agree with that. People lie, bend the truth, exaggerate, mislead and deliberately confuse every day.

      Is it to unreasonable to expect a company to not outright lie, consitently on facts? Sure, of course Vista is great and will improve your life. But don't claim it boots in 2 seconds when it doesn't. Their is sales talk and their is lying and there is a difference.

      True enough, but are any of the facts in the report actually lies? I'm sure the prices quoted are correct (at the time of printing), it just seems they're not quite comparing the same things. This isn't a lie, it's just being misleading or distorting facts. Neither are really lies, but you would expect more from an unbiased source. The report writer is anything but unbiased though. That's my point. Mostly.

      Well, the rest of my point is this: It neither surprises nor annoys me that reports like this are produced because I'm intelligent enough to accept this kind of biased information exists, and deal with it. I don't read this and think "OK, never shall I buy an Apple product!". I assimilate it as a data point, but tag it with "take with a pinch of salt". A big pinch as it happens. I'm not justify bullshittery of this kind, nor am I defending the writers or Microsoft. I'm just trying to clarify exactly what people seem so bloody surprised about...

      --
      You can advertise in this sig from as little as £99.99 a month!
    2. Re:Yes, you are. by An+ominous+Cow+art · · Score: 1

      > Can't say I agree with that. People lie, bend the truth, exaggerate, mislead and deliberately confuse every day.

      Good people don't make a habit of those things - not the kind of people I try to surround myself with.

      And the same goes for companies I do business with, to the extent I can find out ahead of time.

    3. Re:Yes, you are. by Shrike82 · · Score: 1

      I think it's safe to assume that a significant portion of people in advertising, or those writing puff piece reports for Microsoft, have no qualms about being "liberal" with the truth. It's up to you to decide if that makes them bad people or if they're just doing what's necessary to work in today's world.

      --
      You can advertise in this sig from as little as £99.99 a month!
  41. Monopoly by Demonantis · · Score: 1

    While I agree that people clearly understand that they are paying more to buy a mac, I really dislike the monopoly position Apple takes with what hardware can run OS X. What if I want to use a different setup or just plain don't like the look of the box? Of course I could use a hacked version, but thats just like saying DRM doesn't mean anything...

  42. There is an Apple Tax... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    I am sure Apple has patented some of the cooler things about the new Macbooks. I have to admit, I want one, with that magnetic power plug, the solid aluminum case, etc.

    But it's more than just costing more for the hardware -- they have exactly the same tax Microsoft does. If I buy a Mac, I will get OS X, there is no way around it.

    What I really want is the option to buy a machine very similar to modern Macbooks, but with hardware known to support Linux, and without having to pay for an OS I don't intend to use.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  43. Oh, and... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Multiple physical buttons, and HDMI out (not just DisplayPort). Please?

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  44. Re:Just use Ninnle! by platypussrex · · Score: 1

    modding on parent brought to you by the humour impaired sheesh

  45. Paste his article here. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

    Dvorak has admitted in the past that he deliberately trolls in order to get traffic, and thus ad revenue.

    I am therefore giving him neither traffic nor ad revenue, no matter how insightful his comment might be.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  46. Market wars by teh.f4ll3n · · Score: 1

    Just another instance of 2 giants fighting for the market using any means available... Nothing new, nothing special

    --
    Given the choise between Hitler and RIAA/MPAA I'd go for the first one - at least he knew when to shoot himself.
  47. M$ stole the apple tax from Sony!!!! by c0mmanderb0nd · · Score: 1

    Oddly enough this white paper idea for the apple tax looks a lot like the "Cost of owning a 360" comparasion Sony came up with to show why the PS3 was really cheaper than the Xbox 360.

    I guess its no shocker that MS would steal someone elses marketing ploy. Not that it really worked all that well for Sony either.

  48. So what if it costs more? by hwyhobo · · Score: 1

    What's this unhealthy obsession with making sure that someone else doesn't spend his money as he pleases? Even if Apple costs more, it's none of my business when someone spends the money he earned to get what he wants.

    I see Mac user community a much bigger problem than prices. Cultist behavior gives me the creeps.

    --
    End anonymous moderation and posting on /.
    1. Re:So what if it costs more? by east+coast · · Score: 1

      Cultist behavior gives me the creeps.

      What? What!?!?

      Chanting: Ph'nglui Mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn. Ph'nglui Mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn. I'a I'a Cthulhu fhtagn! I'a I'a Shub Niggurath!

      We'll see who laughs last, infidel! Do you hear the thunder?

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  49. Orange Juice and Coke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no such thing as an Apple Tax.

    Comparing prices between Microsoft and Apple is like comparing the cost of orange juice vs. Coke. Orange juice comes from the fruit of the orange tree and is harvested and sold by hundreds of companies. Coke, on the other hand, has a proprietary formula and controls all aspects of the product from marketing to distribution.

    If there is such a thing as an Apple Tax, it's only because the market forces and competition among PC hardware makers has benefited consumers.

  50. The price of Apple is irrelevant by tjstork · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apple's core market is not just the delivery of a commodity computer and a commodity operating system. It is the end to end receipt of a solution. People that buy Apples buy them because you will get good service out of their store, and you will get solid hardware that works.

    There is a reasonable premium to be charged for that and I don't think arguing Mac on price is alone is really indicative of the kind of market people have. Some people are willing to pay a good premium for a good experience. I for one have had an absolutely excellent experience with Macintoshes. I tell myself the same thing as I tell everyone else. If you want the best possible consumer experience, and you don't mind paying more, just go and buy a Macintosh. It's the simplicity of experience, that people pay more for.

    I will have to say, that I don't have the money, so right now I'm running a home built dual Opteron with yesterday's CPUs (Opteron 270s), using Windows Vista Business on one drive and Linux on another... but, hey, if I did have the money, I'd buy the Mac.

    --
    This is my sig.
  51. Propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A b.s. claim of a "Microsoft Tax" = Good
    A b.s. claim of an "Apple Tax" = Bad

    Slashdot's logic seems a bit inconsistant in it's application.

    1. Re:Propaganda by Yaztromo · · Score: 0

      A b.s. claim of a "Microsoft Tax" = Good
      A b.s. claim of an "Apple Tax" = Bad

      Slashdot's logic seems a bit inconsistant in it's application.

      Not at all, the problem is with Microsoft attempting to re-define the nature of the "tax".

      "Microsoft Tax" has always referred to the fact that one was traditionally forced to pay for an MS OS on machines that weren't manufactured by Microsoft, even if you didn't want it and had every intention of replacing it with something else (Linux in recent times, but in times past OS/2, DR-DOS, and other non-MS OS's). Indeed, at one point the "tax" was sufficiently insidious you were paying Microsoft a fee even when you bought a system from one of the big vendors that was pre-loaded with a non-MS OS (due to "per processor licensing agreements" MS had with the big vendors).

      This new "Apple Tax" that Microsoft is trying to invent has solely to do with their world view that Apple systems have a higher TCO than Microsoft systems. There are a lot of really good arguments as to why their TCO calculations for comparable systems are purposefully bogus to try to inflate any existing differences beyond reasonable levels.

      Regardless, if the application appears to be inconsistent, it's because Microsoft is trying to hijack an existing term that works against them by completely redefining it. Unfortunately, considering how frequently people are taking them to task for their numbers as opposed to their redefinition of the term, it seems they've been largely successful.

      I personally defend the original definition. When you buy something with no Microsoft software on it, and it's more expensive than it should be purely because part of the purchase price is going toward a Microsoft software licence for software you're not even getting, that is a tax. Paying more for a high-end system versus a bargain basement system is not now, and never has been, a "tax".

      Yaz.

  52. Imagine, Charging More for A Better Profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've recently switched to a mac and am floored by how superior it is. I use my computer 10 hours a day at least and usually get a model every 2 years. If Apple can make me even a bit more productive I would gladly pay any extra. Anyone that thinks that corporations should not be there to make a profit but rather to provide for the common good should pick up a copy of Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

  53. Or why is Microsoft scared. by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Apple only has a 2% market share so why does Microsoft care?
    Simple the only reason that Apple doesn't make a Cheap Mac that is the same price as HP or Dell is they don't want to.
    I don't own a Mac. But I have to wonder just how much cheaper a Dell or HP is to a none techie user. Throw in a few visits to the Geek Squad and subscriptions for anti everything ware and I am not so sure that a Windows Box is cheaper in the long run.
    Microsoft is just so opening themselves up with this.
    MicroSoft: Sure Macs may be a better than a Windows box but not at the price they charge.
    Apple: And now for just one more thing. The new eMacBook for $699 and eMacTower $499.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  54. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Okay, I'll bite.
    Release dates:
    2001: OSX 10.0/.1, Windows XP
    2002: OSX 10.2
    2003: OSX 10.3
    2005: OSX 10.4
    2007: OSX 10.5, Vista (retail)

    5 user upgrades from XP to Vista Home Premium at $129 ea = $645
    4 OS upgrades for OSX (5 pack, since you'd upgrade all 5 people) @ $200/5pk = $800

  55. Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The Xbox360.

    Wifi = $100
    Xbox Live =$50/year = $250 for 5 years.
    Hard drive $100/$150
    Batteries for controller $20 (play charge kit)
      Total = $470

    Add the $200 for the arcade to get $670. And people say PC gaming is expensive. At least you online for free. A decent graphics card is only $200, if a pc is relatively new it should run most games (maybe not at full settings but at 720p shouldn't be a problem).

  56. Pro/Anti apple press like it is in politics by hellfire · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So there isn't really a conspiracy here, but there is an undercurrent fighting against the pro apple news. The loudest news about apple is pro apple, but only a little less loud is the anti apple news and complaining that said devices aren't perfect. How many people here on slashdot railed against the Mac because it didn't have a command line for so long? Or rail against the iPhone because it's not 100% open or doesn't support Ogg? These are valid arguments, but as people speak out, the almighty dollar takes over, and some journalists pick up on this sentiment and look to make money off it. They establish their niche in reporting and, often, becomes as dogmatic as the pro apple news, and many times stops providing any real content and just keeps finding more ways to say "apple sucks."

    You might think "well duh, of course there are two sides to the story why are you saying this" but if you are swept up in the bipolar press, you aren't realizing there is a third voice, very quiet and very small. Those are the moderates who are actively trying to be objective and are somewhere in the middle. But in just about all news these days, not just tech news, objectivity doesn't sell very well, only the extreme viewpoints do.

    Of course, all of this does not include the fact that Microsoft has a vested interest in getting as many journalists on their side as they can and if they could would bribe anyone and everyone into believing their OS is best. There is a small, anemic conspiracy there, but that's not Apple specific, that's Microsoft trying to fight against any and all competitors. They've done this with Linux before too.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  57. I really do want to buy a mac, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to buy a mac, truly I do. I just don't want to part with my heterosexual lifestyle. They don't tell you it makes you more attractive to other males on the Mac Brochures!

  58. The microsoft/windows racket? by FudRucker · · Score: 0, Redundant

    i just think back years ago when i used windows = not free, then you have to buy anti-virus, buy a decent firewall, buy anti-malware, then some clever trojans & rootkits are not found by the anti-virus & anti-malware so you gotta buy some special app for each and every trojan and rootkit, so if microsoft wants to talk about expenses & expensive add-ons...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  59. I don't think some people see the whole picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I, a security engineer, buy a machine, I'm not the the average consumer. But my wife is.

    If her current Dell laptop broke, I know what her requirements are. She wants something with a 15 inch screen and it has to do what she wants, basically surf the web, email, and edit her photos in Lightroom, that's really all.

    To purchase a 15" Dell will cost me about $800-900 shipped.
    To purchase a 15" Mac will cost me $2000, minimum.

    For the average consumer, I think people can see that some Mac's are overpriced.

    1. Re:I don't think some people see the whole picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lack of configurations != overpriced.

  60. Re:Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If the vendor of the word processor (like Word Perfect) cares, then they will make
    a shiny happy installation program just like any other commercial software vendor
    on the planet (including Oracle).

    Otherwise, I can just just double click on the binary package (like an MSI file)
    or just search for "word processor" in my package manager. There is a shiny happy
    GUI for this and everything.

    1998 called, it wants it's FUD back.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  61. the good, the bad, the humorous, and the confused by v1 · · Score: 1

    The white first gen macbooks certainly had issues. I believe they were the first to attempt a matte finish white plastic case for a laptop computer, which was bound to cause issues with discoloration. There was one bad run of white topcase plastic that stained from skin oil and makeup, though the rest were ok. As to the cracking, there were actually not one, but two separate cracking issues. One was IMHO a design flaw, placing the top lid rests to land at a weak spot where the top case was thin and bridged a gap over the optical drive. The other less-known issue was hairline cracking near the ports. I have no idea why it was doing that, I can only assume it was again a plastics issue of stress cracking. (I'm not a plastics engineer) In all three of these cases though, Apple has been replacing these parts for free, as far as one year out of warranty. Although you can still count those as quality issues, I'd say repairing a year out of warranty is a pretty good reaction by Apple. That's the price you have to pay for cutting edge technology.

    "razor sharp edges" is a bit melodramatic don't you think? They've got an edge like a butter knife.

    The whole heat sink compound issue is entertaining at best. There are only two ways to overuse hsc: put on so much that you can't press the heat spreader down flush on the die, or put on so much that it oozes out and blocks ventilation, neither of which has happened with macs. You'll notice none of the people discussing this "issue" are citing anyone with a clue. (like an electrical engineer) Having worked with electronics for over 30 years, all I can do is laugh at these people that think because they see some hsc oozed out from the spreader that it's somehow defective. The only two common ways to screw this up is use cheap/contaminated hcs, or not get your heat spreader down firm and flush, and that's never been an issue with Apple.

    Heat is turning out to be a tradeoff though. You want it to run as fast as possible, you want it to be small, and you want it to always run cool. Pick two, you can't have all three. Don't set it on your lap while you're doing video rendering. Apple does some of the best cooling of any computer, desktop or laptop, using multiple fans and temperature sensors with zones, and intelligent fan speed control with acoustic consideration. They run cooler (and quieter) than any laptop or desktop of their size and speed. Compare with your dell's size, acoustic level, and processor speed. Apple also figured out early it's a stupid idea to put vents or intakes on the underside of a laptop.

    Jury's still out on the backlight issue. I haven't seen enough examples of this problem yet to figure out what's going on with them. CCT lighting issues are extremely rare and are actually almost alway defective inverters. There seem to have been an early run of LED backlights with the "stage lights" effect but I haven't seen a single one of those show up, I'm assuming those are also very rare or occurred only very early in the initial run.

    I'm surprised you didn't mention the hard drives in the macbooks. OMG seagate needs to be publicly beaten. I've lost count of how many seagate hds have failed in macbooks. Bad choice by Apple to OEM them. Thankfully they're going WD now. Speculating there hasn't been a major outcry because people can more easily recognize an OEM isn't directly responsible for such a clearly outsourced part.

    I haven't heard anyone say a word about issues with the desktops lately. Considering how Apple likes to keep near the bleeding edge, it's surprising to see two entire generations of new systems with no common early issues. (talking about the silver cased imacs or mac pros) Has anyone heard anything at all bad about them? I've ran into a few 24" imacs with bad power supplies, but haven't heard anyone discussing that publicly.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  62. Huh... by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 1

    Did you say something? I was getting work done here, rather than worrying about Microsoft's next great evil plan... you know, life without walls, yada yada yada...

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
  63. Re:"Meanwhile Linux users everywhere....." by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu 9.04 works out of the box with my USB Wi-Fi dongle but now I can't get the proper resolution on my laptop's screen (I get to choose 640x480 or 800x600 on a machine capable of 1440 x 1050). The situation was reversed in 7.10 - the screen worked straight out the box whereas I had to recompile ndiswrapper to get the Wi-Fi working. Bag of shite, mate !

    --
    Squirrel!
  64. Ad parody by MacColossus · · Score: 1

    This is funny no matter which side of the PC/Mac/Linux debate you are on. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbJSuduTrPs

  65. Linux users are scratching their heads alright by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because it seems that they never understand that an OS that doesn't run the apps that I need is not a bargain by my standards at any cost.

    If the machine can't do what I need it to do it doesn't matter how cheap nor how fast it is.

  66. $3500 over 5 years? by greg_barton · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously, before I ditched windows entirely I burned through more than $700/year in personal labor costs just to keep M$ software functional.

    There's a reason why I BUY macs for all of my relatives after their PCs have died. It saves me time and money.

    1. Re:$3500 over 5 years? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      After dealing with grandma constantly getting latest spyware, I decided to just pick her up a mac mini. She's never used OSX before but she picked it up in about 15 minutes, she's over 80 years old.

    2. Re:$3500 over 5 years? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      HI cousin Barton, funny thing, my PC just died...

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  67. Re:"Meanwhile Linux users everywhere....." by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    1998 called, it wants it's FUD back.

    The list of devices that you have to be fearful of on Linux
    continues to grow smaller and less relevant.

    Interestingly enough, a principle similar to what some like
    to apply to Apple can be used here. Simply avoid using the
    cheapest piece of crap you can find. Even in 1998, this was
    useful for avoiding trouble in Windows as well as Linux.

    Sometimes you really do get what you pay for.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  68. so what? by Tom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe Apple is more expensive, maybe it isn't.

    Did I miss the memo where we have abandoned capitalism? Demand and supply meet at the price point of agreement. I'm perfectly willing to pay what Apple asks for its products. Sure, I'd be just as happy to pay less, just as they would be happy to charge more. But that's not the point.

    The point is: Is it worth it?

    Standard PC with Vista - 2000
    or iMac with Leopard - 2500

    I'd rather pay for the second, because not everything is about price alone.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure what level of performance you require on a laptop. As I use laptop for web surfing/coding, all I need is a fast CPU, sufficient ram and a decent resolution screen. I don't need the extravagance of the power consuming 3D graphics chip just to make my UI bounce.

      I find myself in a pattern of building a fast desktop ($500), and replacing the laptop ($1000) every 4 years. I find this practice of providing my computing needs economical and sustainable in the long term.

      I perceive using Mac hardware to be a high risk practice in the long run, where costs can go out of hand and cheaper options run out. This perception is probably driven by seeing the majority of Mac users more willing and ready to spend than me, and also the willingness for Apple to take the money from them. Very soon, I'll find myself to be part of the ostracized consumer market abandoned by Apple.

    2. Re:so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did I miss the memo where we have abandoned capitalism?

      Unfortunately yes, you did miss the memo. It was called an election.

    3. Re:so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can an advertisement about prices and differences possibly be an attack on capitalism? It's captialism in action! You are happy to pay extra. Some are not. Maybe I'm confused, but I thought the basis of free market was that consumers can look at these factors and choose for themselves. But you wouldn't want these differences to be known or talked about? Kettle, pot, black.

    4. Re:so what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I buy the standard netbook with Ubuntu - 200

    5. Re:so what? by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      What standard PC with Vista costs $2000? $2000 PC's are a thing of the 90's.
      I just picked out a laptop for a friend and it was $500. Dual core, 3GB RAM, 200GB HDD.

  69. It hasn't backfired... by xpxp2002 · · Score: 0

    Journalists always speak out in favor of Apple. And since when do 2-3 anti-Microsoft articles indicate backfire? Now years of anti-Vista news stories might...but that's a different argument. All I can say is if you're too blind to see the Apple tax, you must be making too much money. I'll admit they're finally putting up-to-date hardware in the $2800 CrapBook Pro...but it only has 320GB hard drive. Seriously? I'll take my $1000 Dell/HP/Lenovo with Apple's $2800 worth of hardware any day.

  70. Sour grapes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is just bitter.

    Most folks see the bundled initial price of Windows and any subsequent upgrades as a unwanted cost, while Mac people view the Apple Tax and subsequent new releases of OSX as more like a movie ticket or amusement park entrance fee.

    MS you pay to keep your crap running.
    Apple you pay to make your crap shinier.

  71. There is no tax by KGBear · · Score: 1

    My desktop: Mac Pro, 2 x 2.8 GHz quad-core Xeon, 10 GB RAM, 1.5 TB disk, 2 x Radeon 2600 XT. Cost $4.8K. Similar Dell: $ 9K (Precision T7500 64bit). This does not include iWork and iLife which I got with the Mac.
    My laptop: MacBook, 2 GHz Core2 Duo, 4 GB RAM, 160 GB disk, 15", camera, bluetooth, etc. Cost $1.4K. Similar Dell: ~ $1.3K, but the Dell comes with no camera and no additional software.

    My point: Apple's problem (or strength) is that they refuse to make low-end stuff. In the middle range, Dells cost as much as Apples, as my laptop shows. At the higher end, Apples are significantly cheaper. It's not a tax, it's money you pay for more features.

    Of course if you compare the cheapest possible Apple (a mini for $600) with the cheapest possible Dell (Inspiron for $300), it looks like there's a tax but I'd argue that the mini's 2 GHz Core2 Duo beats the inspiron's 2.2 GHz Celeron any day, even if the Inspiron comes with twice the memory -- and the Inspiron would need to run Vista Ultimate for an extra $ 150 to even compare with OS X Leopard; and might need some more memory then.

  72. Cheap crappy products by ukyoCE · · Score: 1

    Cheapy crappy products are cheap and crappy, in regards to both hardware and software. If you like Windows software, and want reliable+fast hardware, it costs roughly the same as a Mac. Nothing to see here, move along.

  73. $999 isn't really much below $1000 though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The grandparent is right: Apple don't have a low end.

    But depending on what you WANT, that's either good or bad.

    If you want something that runs stuff OK, then you don't want high end, you want cheap.

    Cheapest Dell much better than Cheapest Apple

    If you want high-end features, Apple have plenty of models and Dell doesn't. OR they have to be customised (greater unit cost). then

    Expensive Dell Expensive Apple.

  74. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're being ripped off for your XBL subscription, hard drive, and as for the wifi, buy a $30 linksys router, put Tomato firmware on it, make it into a wireless client, plug into Xbox, there, saved $70. Only idiots buy all their equipment from high street retailers and pay full price, I expect better from /.ers

  75. XP was "best" after SP2. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Before then, it was faster but insecure and buggy.

    Compared to the "state of the art" at the time, 98SE was arguably the best (and was the best ***Microsoft***) OS.

  76. Five Years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In five years you can expect your mac to still be working fine, probably without ever having to format and re-install.

    In five years with Windows you can expect to deal with a least a trojan or two that slipped in, a registry that somehow gets itself nasty no matter what your usage habits. Also, if you bought your machine from Dell/HP/Lenovo, you'll be lucky if it even still works in 5 years, I've seen offerings from all these companies only last a couple months before they start having issues.

  77. Hidden costs of windows by Vexorian · · Score: 1

    MS has ordered thousands (rhetoric) of reports on how migration to other, non-MS products are very expensive because of the 'lack of interoperability' caused by MS' lock-in. I find it amusing MS is so happy to say things like the hidden cost of apple computers when MS' business' model is all about hidden costs. I.e: you buy a windows netbook and since it is 2009 there's quite the subvention on them. But when we'll buy them in 2013 and due to the new monopoly on them, they will charge us all they didn't charge today. The same happens with all OEMs, hidden windows tax everywhere. And hardware makers having to go through 'windows certified' programs. All my country paying thousands of windows licenses because the tax office created a 'free' .net, sql-server intensive client for their tax system (which is impossible to run in WINE or Mono). Or SUSE users paying extra for MS' protection. Or tomtom customers now have to pay more just so they can use FAT-32, one of the simplest filesystems with an implementation you would guess after any good OS course... Etc, etc, etc. Hidden MS costs everywhere.

    --

    Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
  78. Troll! by AioKits · · Score: 1

    While off-topic to the post at hand, I am uncertain how voicing an opinion such as the one above constitutes a troll. Perhaps I have hurt someones feelings in which case I apologize. Any of the lower UIDs care to fill me in?

    --
    "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
    1. Re:Troll! by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      Not a particularly low UID, but I think you just upset the Mac Fanbois. Nothing to panic over.

      --
      $ make available
    2. Re:Troll! by AioKits · · Score: 1

      Not a particularly low UID, but I think you just upset the Mac Fanbois. Nothing to panic over.

      Does that unlock a /. achievement?

      --
      "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
  79. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by AlterRNow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Only idiots buy all their equipment from high street retailers and pay full price, I expect better from /.ers

    Most of the consumer market isn't made up of /.'ers, let alone the informed.

    --
    The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
  80. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 3, Informative
    None of those costs are hidden and none of them are mandatory costs.

    Xbox Live =$50/year = $250 for 5 years.

    Unncessary to play the vast bulk of games. You can also get it for around 35/13 months by buying subscription cards. But if you want to play figures 15/month WoW subscription for 5 years = $900.

    Hard drive $100/$150

    Already comes with the 360 unless you buy the crappy Arcade. But even still isn't necessary unless you play online which most games are single player anyway.

    Batteries for controller $20 (play charge kit)

    Or you can spend 6 dollars and get a set of rechargables.

    Total = $470

    Oh noes! Not 470 dollars!

    Add the $200 for the arcade to get $670. And people say PC gaming is expensive.

    If you want to play any games from the last couple of years you would have spent at least 670 if not more on your PC.

    At least you online for free.

    For some games. If you want to play any decent MMO you are going to pay way more in fees over the same 5 years than anyone would pay for a 360 pro and a 5 year subscription to Live. And they would have enough money left over to buy at least a dozen or more games in that same period and still come out ahead.

    A decent graphics card is only $200, if a pc is relatively new it should run most games (maybe not at full settings but at 720p shouldn't be a problem).

    Yeah but it's going to cost you around 600-800 dollars to build a system (assuming you do it yourself) that will be able to do that. So basically your whole argument seems moot.

  81. I'd argue on a "PC tax" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back when I worked in a school district as an IT tech, we looked into getting all staff and high school students laptops. We compared the standard Apple ibook and a few PC laptops that featured similar hardware and software. To get the same hardware and ports between the two, it ran several hundred dollars more for the PC. Not to mention the software like iMovie and GarageBand that came included on the Macs.

  82. This tax, that tax, it's all about VALUE. by geekmux · · Score: 1

    I buy and use what I like and what I feel lets me work best. I don't think the Apple Tax is that high (hell, it might not even exist), but if Apple can command that price and have people pay it, what's wrong with that? It's just economics: things are worth only what people will pay for them.

    I completely agree with you. It's taken me quite a few years to realize this, but I've found that the most valuable thing to me is my time. That alone justifies any premium with Apple, as I find myself spending MUCH less time maintaining a Mac than I do a PC.

    Besides, there's a "tax" on damn near everything you buy. Apple has it's own value-add, and so does Microsoft. Same with Lexus vs. Toyota, or even Ford vs. Ferrari.

    Ultimately, you're buying your satisfaction no matter what the end object is, so the only person ANYONE should be arguing and justifying "taxes" to is the one in the mirror. Funny how we seem to allow our satisfaction to win quite often, and ultimately pay the "extra tax" on a lot of things in our lives.

  83. absurd by confused+one · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not surprised there's a backlash, I just read the report for the first time and I found it absurd

    Let me state for the record that I use a mix of Window and Linux; that I own a Dell, two HP's, and an iPod; I write software for the Windows platform for a living. Let me also state that I do believe that Apple machines are more expensive than a typical HP or Dell box -- what your paying for is industrial design aka "style"; and, if you find a comparable HP or Dell desktop they're usually on par or pretty close to the Apple price, with the laptops still being slightly pricier. Having gotten that out of the way...

    The report has the family buying a Mac Pro -- a workstation class machine???

    For hardware upgrades, Apple's online store prices are quoted and then compared to Newegg prices, instead of HP or Dell online store prices.

    It quotes an external Bluray drive to upgrade the Mac -- even though they have a Pro chassis to stuff an internal drive into

    The report includes the cost for the Apple user to subscribe to Mobile Me, a service they can get for free from somewhere else like Google. It assumes the PC user will use MSN for free...

    It has the Apple user buying home office software but not the PC user, you need to buy at least the basic Office pkg

    The Apple price includes buying Quicken, software which is not included in the PC price

    The cost includes an upgrade for the software on the Apple, but does not include any upgrade costs on the PC

    The Apple user pays for software support, the PC user does not

    The "Apple Tax" should amount to at most a few hundred dollars, if the report was honest.

    1. Re:absurd by QuietObserver · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Furthermore the 'report' was written more like something you might expect out of grade school student (such as the repeated use of the word 'cool' as a noun, and it's extreme overuse). My analysis is that we were subjected to what amounts to little more than petty, one sided advertisement thinly disguised as a serious, but poorly written dissertation.

  84. Re:"Meanwhile Linux users everywhere....." by Povno · · Score: 1

    Ubuntu 9.04 is still in beta; it is for testing purposes only. Final release is due on the 23rd. Ubuntu has come along way since 7.10. I hope you gave this feedback to the community as we work to making Ubuntu and all other versions of Linux easier to both use and understand as we move toward wider distribution.

    --
    sudo apt-get lost
  85. build quality does not reflect reliability by 1800maxim · · Score: 1

    I will agree, Apple notebooks look like they're a quality build, however, that does not reflect reliability.

    My Dell Inspiron from July 2004 is still active today with zero issues over the course of nearly 5 years. It still has original 2 batteries and can last several hours on each. No hard drive failure, no battery failure. It doesn't look pretty, and has wide gaps in the plastic.

    I also have a Thinkpad from October 2004. Again, no failures, although I upgraded the hard drive to a bigger size. Again, gaps in the plastic pieces, does not have a tight fit and finish.

    MacBook? Looks tight. A hard drive failed twice because it overheated. The first time it was replaced under 1-year warranty. The second time, it was out of warranty. The battery started acting up after 1.5 years.

    My wife's HP laptop - replaced the motherboard and the battery shortly after 1 year because the battery would not charge. HP did it for free, although it happened 4 months after the warranty ran out. Kudos to HP for service. Sucks for product. Now the CD-RW/DVD drive does not read all DVDs.

    What's my conclusion? I don't find any laptop being any more "reliable" than any other laptop on average. The overheating issue with the Macbook makes me less convinced of Apple's supposed reliability.

    1. Re:build quality does not reflect reliability by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The plural of anecdote is not data.

  86. Proof of an Apple Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You only have to look at the prices for the RAM and the Video Cards.

    On the Mac Pro, take a look at the price for 32GB of DDR3 ram. Now go to Crucial.com. Crucial is $1500, Apple is $6000. I'd call that a tax.

    Next up we have the video cards. Compare to Newegg's prices for the same cards and tell me there isn't an Apple Tax. Of course there is PROFIT motivation; they're not going to sell the cards for the price they get them for - but I honestly doubt Apple is buying their cards from Newegg.

    1. Re:Proof of an Apple Tax by KGBear · · Score: 1

      Except that you don't have to buy memory from Apple. Get the base system from them, there's no tax there. And go buy memory at the best price you can get. This is just Apple saying they don't want to be in the accessory market...

    2. Re:Proof of an Apple Tax by Slash.Poop · · Score: 1

      This is just Apple saying they don't want to be in the accessory market...

      If they didn't want to be, they wouldn't.

      You will shoot back with...well they have to be because they need to sell replacements if things break. OK fine. But why the masive gouge? That is really what it is, a MASSIVE gouge on their sheep.

    3. Re:Proof of an Apple Tax by KGBear · · Score: 1

      No. They have to because people expect them to. They can't just say "go buy your memory some place else." People expect them to offer it. So they do. For a price. I don't think they make a lot of profit from ram sticks though, despite the huge markup. I just don't believe a lot of people buy ram from Apple.

  87. Also the product ecosystem by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 1

    They made it extensible with a standard port that hasn't changed too much over the years, and managed to get a bunch of other manufacturers to support it with extra gizmos and such (remotes, speakers, etc) from a very early point in the product's history. Anyone wanting to compete with ipods needs to have a plan for fwd hardware compatibility and a product ecosystem, not *just* focus on UI and 'features' in the product. One of the 'features' of an ipod is the ubiquity - any gadget I want has probably been fitted to work with the ipod already.

  88. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1, Troll
    I like your point but this one is wrong:

    least 670 if not more on your PC.

    My Gaming PC, recently retired to running media center...athlon2800 overclocked, NVIDIA6800, NF7-Sv2 MOBO, 80GB hard drive, 2GB ram....have had it for well more than two years and would play any game on the market. You can put that system together for under $200 now adays easy.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  89. Backfire? by Bullfish · · Score: 1

    Whether or not you are a mac, linux or windows user, I don't know how anyone can say their marketing backfired. Techies read tech press, others do not, so they are unlikely to even hear those voices. Marketing is about creating buzz for your product, and judging by the reactions to MS's latest campaign, it has done that. It's when people don't talk about you at all that you have a problem.

  90. iRiver. iAudio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can get both.

    What IS a downer is the loss of the optical output that the iRiver HDD range had.

    Usable on your digital amp without having to put up with the necessarily cheap internal DAC, use the expensive and lovely one in your amplifier.

    NOTE: Apple were FORCED to become a monopoly supplier of iPod music by the RIAA's demands on DRM and its policing. No way to manage to close security holes in DRM if it's licensed to any Tom, Dick and Harry producer in Thailand, so no licensing of the DRM. DRM must be kept secret (else people reverse engineer it) so only iPods can play iTunes DRM'd music.

    Now that the music industry have found that they don't WANT someone else to have a monopoly, they are dropping the DRM requirement.

  91. !!!EFIL4ERODOMMOC by pyster · · Score: 0

    Worse thing about the Apple tax? wiping the jizz off your chin.

  92. Value sweet spot my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "low end" means "junk". I build my own machines. To purchase a decent MOBO, CPU, and decent memory has stayed pretty consistent for several years - about 450 to 550 dollars. That is, no OS, no extra frills, nada. Add in a case, a CD or DVD, a hard drive or two, and you're already at $1,000 bucks.

    The mfgrs who sell sub-$1,000 computers are selling trash, and they know it. Lackwit consumers looking to get something for nothing buy them up, then wonder why they have peice of SHIT.

    Never owned a Mac, folks, but I'll be the last to badmouth them for producing a $2,000 machine with an OS installed, and full support (meaningful support, not just a worthless tech on the phone).

    MS is happy to have their software running on shit machines, that's fine. Mac has standards, obviously. Not everyone is happy to be part of the Lowest Common Denominator.

    1. Re:Value sweet spot my ass by toddestan · · Score: 1

      "low end" means "junk". I build my own machines. To purchase a decent MOBO, CPU, and decent memory has stayed pretty consistent for several years - about 450 to 550 dollars. That is, no OS, no extra frills, nada. Add in a case, a CD or DVD, a hard drive or two, and you're already at $1,000 bucks.

      How do you come up with that price? You can get a decent motherboard for $75. 2-4GB of name brand DDR2 ram will run you $50. A dual core CPU will run you $50. Now that stuff won't be cutting edge or anything like that, but it'll all be name brand, reliable parts that will give you years of service - no junk like PCChips, VIA, or no-name ram. That's less than $200. Spend a bit more on the CPU ($75-$100 more), and you're already in iMac territory in terms of CPU and ram.

  93. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've never seen any person actually buy the WiFi accessory except for morons. And this is including a whole host of people I know who have 360s who aren't tech savvy. They just plugged their's in to a router via the wired connection. The GGP's attempt to add that in as if it was some sort of mandatory cost (on top of all the other nonsense) just makes the post entirely laughable.

  94. Separation of duties by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Informative

    You still haven't convinced me. Why I should pay more now (Apple License and a Windows License) for a mac with bootcamp, when I can just have my regular ole PC (Just a windows license) to play games?

    Because if you really are beta and alpha testing games, wouldn't you like a PC that had the games aspect totally isolated from your "working" OS?

    With the Mac, you have the choice of running OS X, running Windows in Bootcamp (for games) or running Windows in some kind of VM (for any other Windows app and even some games). Add Linux to any of those variants as well and that's more choice than you get with any other system.

    Plus you can use the Windows install you already have so it's not like that's extra - in fact it makes less sense for you to buy a new PC since it duplicates your Windows license.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Separation of duties by rnaiguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It still isn't clear why you would need a mac, except for "more choice", by which you actually mean 1 more choice (OS X). He could dual-boot 2 copies of windows or windows/linux on a non-mac machine, and still isolate his gaming OS from his work OS.

    2. Re:Separation of duties by Khyber · · Score: 1

      I suggest you look here and see just how wrong you really are.

      Oh, and I actually get MORE options with a regular PC - MenuetOS won't work on an EFI-based system. So a PC gives me MORE OS choices than the Mac will currently.

      My PC - Sextuple boot Vista XP 98 Menuet Ubuntu OSX.

      Anyone beating that yet on their OSX machine without the need for a VM or other software?

      Didn't think so.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    3. Re:Separation of duties by Kielistic · · Score: 1

      If I get all I need from Windows and some Linux distro then buying a Apple PC for OS X is simply rewarding a company for having an extremely customer unfriendly end user agreement. I understand their reasons for doing this, some of them I might even almost see as reasonable but I don't see that as a reason to buy a product.

      As much as some people don't seem to be able to understand is some of us genuinely do not like OS X. I do not find it intuitive at all, I find it quite obtuse and a pain to use. So when I hear that I should buy Apple hardware, which for a computer that I would want, is way more than I would want to spend because "OS X is just so much better" I just think you're full of bologna. You like it, that's fine, but don't try to tell me it's a better system by listing a few pluses, especially ones that some people might not find pluses at all.

    4. Re:Separation of duties by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Because if you really are beta and alpha testing games, wouldn't you like a PC that had the games aspect totally isolated from your "working" OS?

      While that might be preferable for the user (sort of - I've never heard of a beta copy of a game messing up anything but itself), it'll result in pretty poor beta testing for the actual company. The whole benefit of getting software out for public beta testing is to get away from the pristine installs of the OS and environment that the developers are testing on. Just because the game works fine on a clean install doesn't mean it's ready to ship, and testing it out on those odd user systems with a dozen apps running down in the system tray is a very important part of the process.

      Or as a professor I once had said about software testing - "Don't just throw a bunch of valid data at a program and check it's results. That's not really testing. If your program takes an input file I may just decide to pass in it's own executable - and I expect a useful error message rather than a crash.". In short plan around what a user might do, and not what they should do.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    5. Re:Separation of duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As if you can't just install Windows on another partition when you've already got a Windows machine? Sorry, but that's a complete bullshit reason.

    6. Re:Separation of duties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, it's not your fault you learned how to use a computer the wrong way.

      OS X is just better. It's more stable than windoze, it's smoother and runs far more good desktop apps than linux, and it's got the best file manager in the world, bar none - Finder.

      It's got the menu bar at the top of the screen where it damn well belongs, the close button is on the left top of the window where it belongs, the resize zone is in the lower right corner of the window where it belongs, the laptops don't have a stupid right trackpad button - you just click with two fingers for a context menu, you can use multi-touch gestures to scroll, change apps, etc., and best of all the hardware just works.

      Now you might not like these features at first, but once you've used nothing but Mac OS for a few months, you'll never want to go back to doing things the wrong way. And it IS the wrong way - M$ did a bad job copying the Mac in the early days, and have never seen fit to fix their mistakes.

    7. Re:Separation of duties by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Oh, and I actually get MORE options with a regular PC - MenuetOS won't work on an EFI-based system. So a PC gives me MORE OS choices than the Mac will currently.

      Because of one OS? But of course your PC wont run Mac OS X, so it's even, and your argument is utter shite.

  95. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by russotto · · Score: 2, Informative

    Note that the 5 licenses only apply to computers owned by the same family and in the same house. If you read the license it does not cover, for example, a Mac owned by a child who has gone to university (or, at least, didn't last time I read the license, which was about two years ago - feel free to correct me if I'm wrong about this).

    It explicitly includes a Mac owned by a child who lives on-campus at a university. However, I doubt the Apple Police are going to come after anyone because they live in off-campus housing but still use their parents' family pack license.

  96. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by ph0rk · · Score: 1

    Technically, most macs sold in 2001 can't run higher than 10.3, so they wouldn't be upgrading anyway.

    Then again, I'm pretty sure most PCs sold in 2001 won't run Vista or Windows 7, either.

    A more realistic comparison might be a 1 or 2 year old machine or set of machines to be upgraded.

    --
    semantics are everything!
  97. NO MAX NO WAI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    macs are made of dead kittens!!!

    And they're gay, to death.

    1. Re:NO MAX NO WAI by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1

      Wow! I remember 1998, too :D

  98. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1
    I like how you left out this important qualifier on my statement "If you want to play any games from the last couple of years". You aren't going to play anything recent like Crysis, Call of Duty 4, etc at a 720p level with an athlon 2800 and an nvidia 6800 unless you love getting only 10 fps.

    You can put that system together for under $200 now adays easy.

    Yeah and have fun not being able to play a whole host of modern games at decent quality.

  99. Back Firing of the Gay Tax? by pyster · · Score: 0

    Um, I am confused? Where is this so called back firing taking place? I have doubts it is backfiring in the mind of the public.

    Want to 'think different'? Buy a PC and install ubuntu. What to come out of the closet? Buy a mac.

  100. How does dragging in a video "suck donkey balls" by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

    BTW, getting your own video onto an iPod sucks big donkey balls.

    Since all you have to do is drag it into iTunes, I disagree. If there's a codec issue you may have to transcode, but again that's one more click...

    If you are doing your own video downloading something like VLC to do the transcoding is a one time operation, and most applications that support video have iPod specific output options now (some that will also add a video to iTunes for you automatically).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  101. Apple Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And an all Mercedes household spends more than an all Chevy household. The point?

  102. Inaccurate... by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Please do give us some examples of the "inaccurate" Apple ads.

    There have been a lot of ads along the lines of, you can also run Office on a Mac. Inaccurate?

    Or how about the ad showing the Magsafe connector and how it helps prevent a laptop from being pulled off a table. Inaccurate?

    Or what about Windows systems getting viruses while the Mac has none. Since the Mac has no active viruses currently and in the past when the ad aired... inaccurate?

    There may have been a few that were a little bombastic, but that's a far cry from pure "inaccurate"

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Inaccurate... by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Several of Apple's "Mac vs PC" ads have quite clearly claimed that Apples are fun but [Windows] PCs only know how to do boring things like make spreadsheets.

      They conveniently neglected to mention that the gaming market for Windows is much, much, much bigger than it is for OSX.

      I know they're not targeting gamers; that doesn't change the fact that they're being deliberately misleading.

      I wrote a forum post here about some of the misleading or outright false things in Apple's ads. It was written in August of 2007, so it obviously doesn't deal with any ads newer than that. Perhaps it's time to revisit the subject...

  103. Re:"Meanwhile Linux users everywhere....." by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

    I had a trawl through the Ubuntu forums and found that other people had reported the same bug (ATI Rage Mobility M4 chipset). I'll certainly be trying the final release of 9.04 (the Wi-Fi functionality was a very pleasant surprise) to see if the graphics issue is cured. If not, I'm just going to revert that machine back to completely XP, rather than Win/Lin dual-boot.

    --
    Squirrel!
  104. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by AlterRNow · · Score: 1

    I was recently in a situation ( rented apartment ) where the WiFi would have been a mandatory cost as I wasn't allow to run cables anywhere ( through the wall or otherwise ). Perhaps the GGGP was/is in a similar situation?

    --
    The disappearing pencil trick. Let me show you it.
  105. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by jdbausch · · Score: 1

    I have to buy all that to run windows on a PC? you've convinced me. wait. Oh, this is a completely unrelated rant? now I get it.

  106. Hidden Fees? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is the pot calling the kettle black. Who are they to spread propaganda about hidden Apple taxes when they charge yearly subscriptions for Small Business Server? Not many know, when they install SBS, that there is a subscription fee. The company I worked for recommended SBS to all of its clients until we learned that the latest edition of SBS required subscription fees, lest everything stop working if they failed to pay (which the company's IT would grind to a halt). Hidden taxes? Unbeknownst subscription fees? What's the difference?

  107. Coverage by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Note that the 5 licenses only apply to computers owned by the same family and in the same house.

    As noted it does cover children in college - but also keep in mind it does not have activation so you can bend the rules if you like. What is worse, pirating the OS after buying it once because a relative needs a copy, or buying a five pack and installing it on your mothers computer?

    Apple is smart to have an option that lets you give them a little more money for something people are going to do anyway.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  108. I'm glad Microsoft is exposing this by jocknerd · · Score: 1

    I'm an Apple fan. I own 2 MacBook Pro's, a Mac mini, and a Power Mac G5. Notice I still have a Power Mac G5. It needs to go but what do I replace it with? Spend $3000 - $4000 for a new Mac Pro? Or settle for an iMac. Thats out of the question. No expandability. Plus it will cost another $700 to upgrade to 8GB of memory because it only contains two memory slots and 4GB DDR3 modules are not cheap. Alternative: Build my own machine for around $1500 - $2000 and hope that I can get OS X to run on it. I run Final Cut Pro so Linux is out of the question. Now if Adobe ever released Photoshop and Premiere, I would probably move back to Linux.

    1. Re:I'm glad Microsoft is exposing this by geekoid · · Score: 1

      3 - 4 grand? how about 2500 to 3200.
      for 3200 you get 6 Gigs. and it's in 6 1 Gig slots. It's also dual quad core. It can be bump to 8Gigs for 100 mucks.

      For 2500 you get 3G. Three 1 Gig sticks. So it had at least 3 slots, if not 6. Also, for an aditional 250 you can get 8 gigs. A far cry from 700 bucks.

      All this might be out of your price range, and that's fine. However use honest numbers.

      http://store.apple.com/us/browse/home/shop_mac/family/mac_pro

      I do not own a Mac, I am not a fan boy, I'm just sick of people not spending the 45 seconds it would take to be more honest about their points.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:I'm glad Microsoft is exposing this by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      All this might be out of your price range, and that's fine. However use honest numbers.

      http://store.apple.com/us/browse/home/shop_mac/family/mac_pro

      I do not own a Mac, I am not a fan boy, I'm just sick of people not spending the 45 seconds it would take to be more honest about their points.

      (Note: I'm not the GP poster)

      Last time I checked the Mac Pro page, there was no single-CPU version, only two dual-CPU versions. I'd have to search my IM logs to find out when that was and what the price on the cheaper model was, but I'm pretty sure it was $2999.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  109. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by El+Capitaine · · Score: 1

    Agreed - I actually took an old router that only had one working Ethernet port, flashed it with DD-WRT, and made it an Ethernet bridge. I do have the official adapter as well, but I bought that afterward when a friend who was selling his Xbox offered it for $20.

    Sure it's nice when I take my Xbox with me various places because I can always find a Wi-Fi signal and it's very easy to configure, but unless you get a great deal like I did it's really not worth it.

  110. Hidden costs... or hidden (five finger) discounts? by zarmanto · · Score: 1

    Well gee, of course an all-Apple household would cost more... because after all, previous studies have already show that MacHeads are more honest than their Windows brethren... so likewise, MacHeads are obviously more likely to pay for all of their software (as well as their media files) instead of pirating it, right? ;-)

    Well... that, or both studies are contrived and worth less then the ad-click-throughs that they generated for the sites reporting on them. Like Mark Twain was so fond of saying... "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies... and statistics."

  111. Re:the good, the bad, the humorous, and the confus by Megane · · Score: 1

    The white first gen macbooks certainly had issues. I believe they were the first to attempt a matte finish white plastic case for a laptop computer, which was bound to cause issues with discoloration. There was one bad run of white topcase plastic that stained from skin oil and makeup, though the rest were ok.

    Whereas the aluminum models, ever since they replaced the titaniums, (I don't know about the new unibody) had a finish that would be etched by skin oils of some people. Like me. It made some nice pits where my palms rest. That's why I got a Marware pad for my newest one. And the tops of the keyboard keys would erode over time from my fingernails with normal typing.

    --
    #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  112. Where's Windows 7? by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Troll

    Since Windows 7 is theoretically the OS that "catches up to OS X" you need to add the upgrade price for that as well.

    And of course, an OS X user could have skipped any of those updates if desired... a number of people skipped 10.4 and went straight to 10.5.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  113. Pro-Microsoft Media? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sorry, that's bull. 90% of the time I see a computer on TV, it's a Mac.

    Macolytes seeing a conspiracy against Apple is like seeing people from Wisconsin seeing conspiracy against cheese.

  114. Yeah I'm Anon, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't like the fact that on his charts, Apple people paid for MS office, but the PC people didn't. Also under the video upgrade, they got the same video cards - apparently Apple people paid over 100 more.

    I'm a PC (Linux) and understand performance benefits, but some of this is completely ridiculous!

  115. SILENCE! by gobbo · · Score: 1

    A lot of people, for example, don't care about FireWire 800, 802.11n, or ExpressCard, or dual-layer DVD-RW, and a machine lacking these can easily be cheaper.

    Or, for that matter, quiet. Geeks comparing printed specs are deaf, unless they've actually bothered to cost out quiet computing.

    While desktop Macs aren't silent, they're generally very quiet, and it carries tangible value.

    I couldn't build a silent small-form hackintosh with IPS monitor for video editing for the same price I got a refurb iMac 24", it would have been about $150 (+ shipping) more just in parts from ncix, plus lots of labour and a dozen different warranties to worry about.

    1. Re:SILENCE! by prockcore · · Score: 1

      While desktop Macs aren't silent, they're generally very quiet, and it carries tangible value.

      Must be a recent development with the intel macs.. because I've got a jet engine under my desk in the form of a G5.

    2. Re:SILENCE! by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Yah, those were pretty loud! Had to stuff one in a padded cabinet, otherwise what was the point of $500 speakers?

      The newer top end machines are still only quiet when not under heavy load. It's the imacs and the mini that are mostly quiet. Anything with 8 cores and a giant render is going to need some serious cooling.

  116. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    "If you want to play any games from the last couple of years you would have spent at least 670 if not more on your PC."

    WRONG!!! You are the weakest link!

    $350 for my 2.6GHz AM2 Athlon64X2, 4GB PC-5300 DDR2, 2TB HDD space, and a 512MB 9800GTX+ superclocked with a 700w Rocketfish PSU.

    You must be a Best Buy consumer.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  117. Dad is that you? by Mishotaki · · Score: 1

    I BUY macs for all of my relatives after their PCs have died. It saves me time and money.

    I wonder how fast i can make my PC "die" so that you can buy me one of those slick, sexy and resellable Macs?

    I don't mind if you ask me: "Who's your daddy?" at all you know...

  118. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    I was recently in a situation ( rented apartment ) where the WiFi would have been a mandatory cost as I wasn't allow to run cables anywhere ( through the wall or otherwise ).

    Then run it around the baseboards to your router. It's really not that hard.

  119. So much shareware... by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

    You really ended up purchasing lots of "small" apps for the Mac? I've found that Shareware in the Mac community blows away the Windows community by about x100. There are a TON of non-crippled apps for the Mac that are shareware, way more so then on Windows.

    http://macupdate.com/
    http://versiontracker.com/

    --
    With the first link, the chain is forged.
  120. Ironic by not-my-real-name · · Score: 1

    Years ago, for those old enough to remember, Macs were criticized for being "toy" computers. They were unlike the computers that were used to do "real" work. In those days, "real" work meant a command line.

    Today, Macs are criticized for not having enough games.

    I think that it's funny.

    --
    un-ALTERED reproduction and dissimination of this IMPORTANT information is ENCOURAGED
    1. Re:Ironic by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      >>>Macs were criticized for being "toy" computers.

      The Commodore Amiga went through the same thing - "it's just a game machine" - in the late 80s. I don't find it quite as funny though since Amiga died. :-(

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
  121. Talking points by KGBear · · Score: 1

    Hm, maybe this is just like the "Linux myths" campaign of years ago. Just a place to consolidate all the talking points. Accuracy or even honesty are not important. What matters is putting workable arguments in the mouths of opinion formers, which in the Windows ecosystem are usually store sales people, support "IT guys" and the neighbor's kid. They don't need to know a lot to defend or even understand the arguments. They just need to sound like they know what they're talking about and this kind of article does that for them. The real news to me is the fact that MS seems to be worried enough to launch a campaign against Apple.

  122. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    $350 for my 2.6GHz AM2 Athlon64X2, 4GB PC-5300 DDR2, 2TB HDD space, and a 512MB 9800GTX+ superclocked with a 700w Rocketfish PSU.

    That's such a bullshit lie. I priced out all those things (including the cheapest ones for each part I could find) and the cost was 500 dollars. Besides you don't even mention the case or any DVD/CD/ drives, the network card, sound card or any other vital pieces of hardware for gaming. Adding in all those even with the cheapest parts push it over 600 dollars.

    You must be a Best Buy consumer.

    Nope, build my computers from wholesale parts.

  123. iPod alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Genuine question from someone wanting an iPod alternative - Which ones are fine and work well?

    I have bought several from Sansa, and I like them.

    Sansa makes a little player with a clip on it. Unlike an Apple iPod Shuffle, it has a little display and you can navigate through menus. The 2GB version is around $40; I'll never pay $80 for a Shuffle.

    The Sansa players work great in Linux; just plug them in and they show up as a disk drive. You can probably get software to manage your tunes a la iTunes, but I'm one of those weirdos who thinks copying music files by hand just isn't that hard. The newer Sansa players (such as the Clip) can play Ogg Vorbis and FLAC! Most importantly, the audio quality is quite good. They come with not-too-horrible ear buds, but I have tried them with my Sennheiser HD-555 headphones and they sound really clean.

    http://www.jr.com/sandisk/pe/SAD_MX11R02GK/

  124. I kind of agree with this one by melted · · Score: 1
  125. and don't forget the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    being an idiot tax

  126. Re:The problem is Apple's complete lack of ethics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually it's the other way around. I find managers like you to be difficult people.

  127. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by another_neophyte · · Score: 1

    I guess I'm a moron then. We bought the WiFi accessory (but not for $100, it came in a well priced bundle) because the console gets played in various rooms in the house and dragging a cable around through hallways and up and down stairs didn't seem to make much sense.

  128. Microsoft advocates piracy! by argent · · Score: 1

    MacHeads are obviously more likely to pay for all of their software (as well as their media files) instead of pirating it, right?

    So that's why the report included Microsoft Office as a cost on the Mac side and not on the PC side. Microsoft's saying "It's OK, go ahead and boost a copy of Office from work... so long as it's on Windows".

  129. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    And in case you want to see how I did it: AMD Athlon 64 LE-1640 Orleans 2.6GHz: $46 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103239
    Rendition by Crucial 1GB 240-Pin DDR2 SDRAM DDR2 667: $10 ($40 for 4GB) http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820148240
    HITACHI 0A38016 1TB: $85 ($170 for 2GB) http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822145233
    ZOTAC ZT-98PES3P-FCP GeForce 9800 GTX+ 512MB: $130 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048+1305520548+106792522+1067942261&Configurator=&Subcategory=48&description=&Ntk=&SpeTabStoreType=&srchInDesc=
    COOLMAX CTI-700B 700W: $55 http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010320058+113142557&Configurator=&Subcategory=58&description=&Ntk=&SpeTabStoreType=&srchInDesc= Now that doesn't include case, DVD drive and motherboard but your price is already $441 and at least $500 with a motherboard. I bought a 360 Pro and with my 3 years of Xbox Live and having bought 1 extra controller I've barely spent $500. So any claims that a PC is cheaper than a 360 with Xbox Live is just false.

  130. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by kokojie · · Score: 0

    I bet your PC runs without a motherboard too.

  131. Campare? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Things that are comparable to some degree:
    Linux, OSX, Vista
    Also:
    Dell, Mac, Gateway, Alineware.

    Things that are not comparable:
    Mac and Linux
    Mac and Vista
    Mac and OSx
    OSx and Dell
    OSx and AlienWare.

    By comparable, I mean they are in the same area, so you can comparable them, not comparable as in '
    the same'.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  132. YMMV by langelgjm · · Score: 1

    I used OS X as my primary desktop for two years.

    I'm coming up on two years of daily use, and have just switched from Tiger to Leopard a few weeks ago, FWIW.

    The one thing going for it is that it's pretty. Other than that, it's unnecessarily slow, has a shitty filesystem, is no more stable than XP and certainly not Vista, always had issues sleeping and waking, ilife was buggy (specifically iPhoto), is only secure through obscurity (as we've seen with the recent pwn2own contest).

    Never had a problem with it being slow. At tasks like video encoding, it's faster than my desktop, which is a 2.6 GHz dual-core Opteron. In terms of user experience, the slowest thing I've experienced is waiting for Word or OpenOffice to launch, neither of which are known for being fast applications.

    Not sure what "shitty filesystem" means. In terms of actual everyday usage, it's fine for me. Spotlight is amazing, so I rarely use the Finder, which admittedly does kind of suck (why does pressing "Enter" on a file take me to rename it?). At least as good, if not better, than Google desktop search, and Windows Desktop Search is horrid by comparison.

    Stability? Yeah, I'd say same as XP - in my experience both are very stable, and single app crashes don't bring down the whole system. I've had maybe three or four hard lockups in nearly two years. Vista? I tried it a year ago and gave up.

    Never, ever had a problem with sleeping or waking. Maybe you have a hardware issue.

    I don't use iLife/iPhoto/iMovie/iTunes. Front Row is pretty, but this is primarily a work/school machine, and I don't care for Apple's "user-friendly" applications, which to me feel far too confining.

    So yeah, YMMV. I'll tell you what did suck, though - using Ubuntu on this MacBook. PITA to install and configure, and when I was finally done, had hard lockups every time I used it. Maybe it's just 8.10.

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
  133. non-computer person by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone here routinely go almost a week without using any desktop or laptop computer (any, anywhere)? No? Let me give you a perspective as a former nerd. I got reformed early -- a stint in the armed forces will do that to you.

    Well I make a little bit more than 60 dollars per hour. "To build, install, and troubleshoot a [Linux] machine until it is running the way I like it" would probably take me an average of about 80 hours (two weeks full-time work). This would be roughly a $4800 tax for using Linux versus OS X or Windows, which oddly I can use out of the box.

  134. $3,367 over five years?? by saforrest · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hmm, $3,367 over five years for a household...

    Am I the only one who thought that paying an extra $600/year per household to escape the burden of dealing with Windows (for all users, not just non-techie ones) wouldn't be that unreasonable a price?

    1. Re:$3,367 over five years?? by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      Not if you have to put up with Mac Users..

  135. Re:Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

    'Kay, I don't use Ubuntu, but on Gentoo, it was easy: "emerge app-office/openoffice-bin".

    --
    MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
  136. OMG it's the same with everything! by Chupathingy · · Score: 0

    Lauren is looking for a laptop for under a grand... "Macs don't make a laptop for under $1,000, guess I'm not cool enough to be a Mac owner."

    Joe is looking for a car for under $20,000... "Porche doesn't make a car for under $20,000, guess I'm not cool enough to drive a Porche."

    BTW - I'm a Windows user, I don't have anything against Macs. They just don't have the options features that are important to me in my price range.

    BTW - I drive a Dodge Neon. I don't have anything against Porches, they just don't have the options and features that are important to me in my price range.

    1. Re:OMG it's the same with everything! by Ash-Fox · · Score: 1

      Lauren is looking for a laptop for under a grand... "Macs don't make a laptop for under $1,000, guess I'm not cool enough to be a Mac owner."

      Joe is looking for a car for under $20,000... "Porche doesn't make a car for under $20,000, guess I'm not cool enough to drive a Porche."

      This would imply that the Mac has some kind of superiority over Windows (since the Porsche has some unique features over other less expensive cars), but I don't see anything OS X can do that Windows can't.

      Even in Apple's own territory, like graphics, Windows out-does OS X since applications like Photoshop are only available in 32bit on OS X while on Windows, there is the possibility to use a 64bit version, making work really well with very large images (due to being able to address more than 3.8GB of RAM). I simply cannot think of any applications where there is no equivalent or better. Sure, there are UI differences, but I don't see it being a significant difference where it's a comparison between, lower range car that has a cooling fan system verses the air conditioning systems in a Porsche.

      Hardware wise, there is no significant difference from what I've seen in life span, durability between the brands, all the brands have made crappy hardware and good hardware and Apple is no exception.

      In summary, I don't agree with your statement that a Mac is a equivalent to a Porsche in the car industry.

      --
      Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
  137. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 3, Informative

    Try again. This time with real numbers.

    Xbox 360 arcade can handle most saved games. It does after all come with a 512MB memory card.

    So $169 from Dell if you're patient.

    Xbox Live Gold is $30 a month if you buy it in January. So 5 years = $150

    That's all you need $319 for 5 years of gaming. (Of course then games etc.)

    I don't need Wifi. I use a primitive technology called CAT5. Since there is a conveniently placed cable plug right next to my television.

    Meanwhile I just built a quadcore system and it cost me about $1200. Impossible to buy as a mac. And also a fare penny more than my Xbox which I own not because it's cheaper but because it's a better gaming system.

  138. Why do people even look at this crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Honestly? How many version of Vista are there? 5? What's the pricing difference between those? 200 bucks? Versus features between each version? Negligable BS that should be included in one.

    If you want to pay 399.99 for "Vista Ultimate," go ahead. Be my guest. While Mac users will buy 1 of 2 versions of OS X. Most of them will buy the everything you need, nothing you don't version for 129.00, while some guy somewhere in a lab or a company will buy 1 or 2 copies of the Server Edition.

    Just as well, let's spec out a comparible PC to a Mac? Oh, same fucking price or higher.

    Not to mention, that none of these PC companies, including Microsoft even know the meaning of innovation. The Mouse, USB, Firewire, SCSI, Color screens, Windowed interface, who had this in their boxes first? Oh, that's right, Apple.

    Viruses, trojans, and worms oh my! Yep, just for the paint-by-numbers programming method of Windows. OS X and Linux? Nary a wary of scary! Sure, there's some scripts, but the threat level is a -8 on a scale of 1-10 compared to their Microsoft Counterpart.

    BTW, I have both at home, I play the hell out of Left 4 Dead and Team Fortress 2 on XP, and do all my photoshop and p0rn surfing on the Mac. And once Linux can run a program that doesn't have to be compiled by me, and can run Photoshop, I'll switch to that. Unfortunately I'm still trying to figure out how to compile the godamn audio drivers for the onboard audio.

    But really, you think people buying a BMW are like "jeez, why can't i get one with a downgraded transmission from GM?" No. So please, either listen to Reason (Snowcrash, anyone?) or STFU already. Use what you want and quit comparing Microsoft, a software only company, to a complete all-in-one solution like Apple. It's just retarded.

  139. No Apple Taxation without representation! by tenzig_112 · · Score: 1

    Microsoft's new advertising push is focused on something they call the "Apple Tax," the notion that the relative cost differential between PC's and Macintosh computers amounts to an unfair surcharge for their products.

    Apparently, the company's marketing wizards have surmised that after a quarter century of personal computing, no one has ever bothered to look from one price tag to another to notice that Macs cost more. And who can blame them? Consumers are busy people. Microsoft knows that, which is why they hired actors to do the comparison shopping for them.

    For example, someone could buy a Vista-powered laptop for $1200 that would operate at full speed for about ten months before clogging up with registry errors, worms, and a tangled mesh of incompatible third party software and drivers. On the other hand, that same person could pay up to $200 MORE for a laptop that, according to customer feedback, works trouble-free for several years.

    As you can see, the numbers just don't add up in Apple's favor- especially if you completely ignore issues like stability and reliability, which Microsoft has for decades.

    What Apple doesn't want people to know is that Microsoft's Vista is a fantastic operating system for people who don't know much about computers and don't plan on using them very much.

    In some sense, it comes down to temperament.

    Mac users, it seems, just aren't cut out for the PC life. They're type-A personalities who push the power button and expect things to happen. For whatever reason, these special snowflakes seem to think that they feel they deserve a working computer just because they paid for it. They run several memory-intensive apps at the same time and when something does go wrong, it's such a rare occurrence that the spoiled brats actually have the temerity to get upset about it.

    On those occasions, they flood Apple with complaints and demands that the company improve their products- as if they're special or something. Imagine how expensive PCs would be if Microsoft had to constantly tweak their products for better security and usability. Ridiculous, I know. That's why PC customers are lucky that Microsoft made the decision long ago to forego these areas and pass the savings onto users who would then, in turn, pass that money onto anti-virus companies.

    A PC, on the other hand, teaches you how to take life as it comes, to roll with the never-ending series of punches that life, and this sparking metal and plastic brick in your den, have thrown your way. There's something very Zen about the PC user experience. When you encounter a catastrophic crash and lose your family photos, you blame yourself for not backing up regularly enough. When you re-install the OS for the third time in a year you completely understand when tech support informs you that you need to buy a whole new license or a new computer. You learn acceptance.

    Buying a dogmeat-cheap PC is penny wise. You've suspected this all along, and thanks to Microsoft's new ad campaign, now everybody knows it. If your expectations and self-esteem are low enough, perhaps you too can be a PC.

    1. Re:No Apple Taxation without representation! by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      that would operate at full speed for about ten months before clogging up with registry errors, worms, and a tangled mesh of incompatible third party software and drivers.

      Funny, my Averatec (5 years old) running OpenSuSE 11.0 doesn't have those problems.

      Imagine how expensive PCs would be if Microsoft had to constantly tweak their products for better security and usability.

      Most Linux distros are so tweaked, but they're not that expensive.

      A PC, on the other hand, teaches you how to take life as it comes, to roll with the never-ending series of punches that life, and this sparking metal and plastic brick in your den, have thrown your way. There's something very Zen about the PC user experience. When you encounter a catastrophic crash and lose your family photos, you blame yourself for not backing up regularly enough. When you re-install the OS for the third time in a year you completely understand when tech support informs you that you need to buy a whole new license or a new computer. You learn acceptance.

      I haven't had this either.

      Hey, here's an idea: stop blaming hardware manufacturers for software problems not of their making.

    2. Re:No Apple Taxation without representation! by earlymon · · Score: 1

      Your sarcasm is sublime.

      --
      Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
  140. I am willing to write a report by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

    and say Microsoft is great for let's say $10,000. I think this is less than what they paid. Think M$, I can do the same thing cheaper.

  141. No shit by rtrickey · · Score: 2, Informative

    I would love to buy a 17" mac, but every time I look at the price it insults me.

    I find it really difficult to make the case that macs are not significantly overpriced, especially for people who use macs primarily as a windows machine. The paper points out the obvious: spec-for-spec, PCs destroy macs in terms of value.

    The only way I can see anyone justifying paying this premium is if they're dead-set on use OS X. Otherwise, it's a waste of money.

    Note that I'm not saying that macs are bad --they're fantastic. But Mercedes are also fantastic, but are overpriced compared to similarly equipped cars.

    And as for market share, Apple doesn't *want* a large market share. If they did, they would lower their prices. They have a strategy that gives them insane margins, and it works. In would be crazy for them to wade into the low-margin ring that Dell, HP, et al fight in.

    1. Re:No shit by Swift2001 · · Score: 1

      The 17" was made for production professionals, thus the "Pro" after the name. Editing dailies on set? Use that. Recording tracks for the next album? Use a Mac 17". Edit photos in Photoshop before going to the blind to catch some more wildlife photos? Use the Mac. Got more money than you need? Use that 17".

      An out-of-work actress who gets approached by Microsoft to buy any screen with a nominal 17" screen, though the maximum resolution is the same as many smaller machines? Get an HP. Then collect your royalties and buy a Mac.

  142. It's all about the babes. by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

    If you have Apple stuff then chicks know you have money or at least you did have it. I guess that could work the other way too.

    Do you want a Cadillac or VW beetle, that is the question.

    1. Re:It's all about the babes. by prockcore · · Score: 1

      Beetle. I don't know what they did to the Caddy but it's awful now. My mother-in-law has a 2005 CTS, it constantly has electrical problems.

  143. KDE4Windows, OSGeo4W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of KDE4 and libraries are available apt-get style with the cygwin type installer. In addition, there is the OSGeo4W which has open source apps like GRASS and QGIS and some server stuff for GIS use. It also uses the same installer.

  144. Apple needs to counter with a by geekoid · · Score: 1

    find the Green computer. Just list how much more green the Apple systems are.

    At the end, have them choose the 1500 Mac notebook.

    Go after the hardware.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  145. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by geekoid · · Score: 1

    No you can't. Not one the high performance games anyways.

    Price out a 200 dollars system that can run a performance game at a decent resolution.

    You will need to spend at least a 100 bucks for the video card alone. Another 20 bucks for a really cheap case, and another 80 for a decent power supply.

    You could squeeze a system into 500 bucks, but it will not be running next years games. 1000 bucks and you can build one that will last 4 years.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  146. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    I didn't mention other parts because I do the SMART thing and reuse parts that still work, like case, DVD, and I can bet you don't have half a clue on where to get the good stuff for dirt cheap.

    Quit being a pretentious assuming prick. I can do it for that price because I've been in this industry for nearly two decades. I know the good sources, I also know where I can find the same stuff probably cheaper from someone else second hand. Are you that ignorant of where you can go to buy things? You can find similar systems in pawn shops for $150!

    God, you have a lot of growing up to do if you don't know about things like pawn shops and second-hand merchandise.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  147. Starting a distro war. I'm so bad. by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

    > Not sure if it will be in Jaunty or not, but Ubuntu is working on a fix for that.

    Oh! So Ubuntu will finally catch up to where Fedora has been for a couple of years. Fedora has had repos installable as packages for a long time. CLick here to add the Adobe Flash repo, etc.

    Maybe in a few more years it will backport to Debian?

    Kinda like the Debian based distributions only recently got GPG signed packages while RPM has had PGP signing since before GPG was available.

    Maybe someday the Debian based systems will get bi-arch and make 64bit a seamless experience instead of basically stuffing a whole seperate 32 bit system into a chroot. Oh, but dpkg/apt doesn't support that either.

    Yet in any distro comparison thread we hear the zealots proclaim Apt-get the ultimate and whinge that if RPM would just go away we would have much better world with only one package format.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  148. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    See, your problem is you're shopping at Newegg. Newegg isn't even close to being a first-tier source.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  149. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    The xbox online play annoys me no end...
    I want the freedom to play on my own servers, not be forced to use company supplied ones.
    I want to be able to play lan games, sometimes in places with no internet connection (getting a bunch of friends together in a hall somewhere is great fun).

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  150. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    Okay, then show me where you got the components and the prices of them. I'm doubting you only paid 350 dollars. Either that or you are intentionally leaving out the prices of things like the case, motherboard, dvd drive, etc to make your claim.

  151. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by sexconker · · Score: 1

    Bullllllllllllllllllllllshiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit.

    $200 IF

    You use an old mouse, keyboard, cd drive, hard drive, case, monitor, etc.
    You steal windows / scrap your existing machine's installation. (Or you could run WINE, but support isn't perfect, especially for newer titles or STEAM)

    When people claim you can build PC X for $Y, they always leave out the details. Most people DON'T have spare parts lying around, or, if they do, don't WANT to use their shitty old parts.

    I always build my own. But there is no denying that for budget-based builds, Dell wins every fucking time, plus you get damned easy support and you won't have to dig through some Taiwanese site or wait for Newegg to process an RMA. Their hardware (motherboards and power supplies) are lame, sure. But the CPU, GPU, and other components are the same shit you would get off of Newegg. The cases (interior) are well designed now (yeah, they used to be terrible) and give you room to upgrade later. Plus, the damned thing comes built. Sure, it's fun building a PC, but I have yet to experience a blood-free build, and wire management is always a bitch.

    Case in point, for $499:

    Intel Core 2 Duo E7400 (2.8GHz, 3M, L2Cache, 1066FSB)
    2GB Dual Channel DDR2 SDRAM 800MHz - 2DIMMs
    Dell 22 inch Widescreen E2209WFP Analog Flat Panel Display (It says analog, but yes, it has DVI-D)
    250GB Serial ATA Hard Drive (7200RPM) w/DataBurst Cache
    256MB ATI Radeon HD 3450 -supports DVI,HDMI,VGA Connections
    Single Drive: 16X (DVD+/-RW) Burner Drive
    FREE Genuine Windows Vista Business Bonus w/ XP Professional downgrade Installed

    The OS licenses add a lot to the cost, sure, but most people need them.

  152. yeah, ridiculous by Carcarius · · Score: 1

    I don't have an all-Mac house, but we have 2 MBP's, a white MB, and an airport extreme and my costs aren't any higher than if I had all-PC. Student discounts has helped me out a lot. It is just propaganda. Buy a Mac if you want to, if not, don't. Nothing to see here.

  153. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Dahamma · · Score: 1

    I can do it for that price because I've been in this industry for nearly two decades. I know the good sources, I also know where I can find the same stuff probably cheaper from someone else second hand

    Which makes your point on this thread about as useful as "health care is cheap, just take out your own appendix!"

  154. So This Makes Other People Angry Too!? by daveofnf · · Score: 1

    So I'm sitting on the couch watching TV and this commercial comes on. It's about this guy who is going to buy a laptop and Microsoft is going to pay for it. So he's looking around the store and there's a large variety of PCs around, and he's looking at them all, being very picky.

    Then he comes across this Mac and he says something about people who like Macs are about pretty things, I think that's what he said. So I think to myself, Vista WASEN'T about making the OS look nicer?

    So the commercial goes on, guy buys a PC. Then the ad states something like PCs are best buy for your dollar (over MAC). Well there's so many things wrong with this statement. Microsoft has no control over the price of laptops, that's controlled by the vendors. Microsoft still charges you for the operating system, it's just rolled into the price of the laptop. Yes, Mac does the same, but when it comes time to format your Mac or replace your hard drive or something, you don't need some damn key to do it. It's a Mac, you paid for the Mac, that means you paid for the OS. That's great.

    I'm a Linux guy and I like not paying for software. I also like making that software better. Sometimes I wish Canonical, Novel or RedHat would put in their two cents worth. Then again it might be better that Microsoft seem a little schizophrenic. Anyway, Linux isn't about the corporation or sales figures.

    The moral of the story: don't watch TV, especially commercials.

    1. Re:So This Makes Other People Angry Too!? by zarmanto · · Score: 1

      The moral of the story: don't watch TV, especially commercials.

      That... or DVR all of your TV shows with something like EyeTV, add automatic commercial skipping with something like Comskip, and never watch television on the TV studios terms again... watch your shows whenever you want, and without commercials.

      Trust me... you'll never go back.

    2. Re:So This Makes Other People Angry Too!? by daveofnf · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more along the lines of reading a book instead. Maybe learn to play an instrument. But what you said works too.

  155. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    Except you seem to be oblivious to the conversation that was going on. The person I was responding to was comparing the costs of a brand new Xbox and all other components involved were also the retail price of new components. You are talking about secondhand shit and pawnshops which isn't even remotely a comparable situation to the one we were talking about and one in which almost no consumer is going to also do. They are going to either go to a place like Newegg/FRYS, to an OEM like Dell or some local computer dealer who isn't going to get them a PC like you mentioned for only 350 dollars.

  156. Nothing new. Hyundai compares itself to Lexus. by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
    So what is new? The value for money theme has been hyped by so many companies before. Pontiac Grand Prix comparing itself to BMW or Hyundai comparing itself to Toyota or even Lexus...

    But usually the lower priced value for money guys are the bottom feeding under dogs while their competition has the market share and huge margins and chic image. Here it is topsy turvy that is new.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  157. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    I leave out those prices because I reuse components. Same Case for years, same power supply for years. Same SBLive! from 7 years ago. Same speaker system. SAME INTERNAL CABLES.

    Go to pricewatch.com. Even NEWEGG advertises on Pricewatch, and they don't show up very often at all in my searches for the exact hardware I want.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  158. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    So if we are going to play the game of secondhand parts I can get a 360 with controller, Hard drive and Wifi all used priced out for less than 250 dollars. Throw in 2 years of Xbox Live and it's still less than your purported system. So basically that makes the original poster's and your point even more moot.

  159. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    Okay, I'll bite.
    Release dates:
    2001: OSX 10.0/.1, Windows XP
    2002: OSX 10.2
    2003: OSX 10.3
    2005: OSX 10.4
    2007: OSX 10.5, Vista (retail)

    True, but maybe Microsoft should try this too? It may cost more in the long run, but in the short it feels cheaper. Also, Microsoft keeps on wanting to go the subscription route, but if they provided incremental upgrades that people wanted, then people would spend money as if it was a subscription.

    It should be noted that Linux also goes though just a many yearly revisions as MacOS X, with Ubuntu leading the pack. I think bite sized improvements help people stay interested and also means each release is trying to focus on less features but push more quality.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  160. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    So basically you're trying to compare the cost of a system built with reused and secondhand parts to a discussion with someone who was pricing out a brand new 360, brand new 360 hard drive, brand new WiFi accessory and brand new controller with recharger? Yeah those are totally analogous situations. Since they were pricing out everything as brand new to try to make a claim that the Xbox 360 is more expensive than PC gaming then it's only analogous to price out new PC parts. Using secondhand and reused parts as a way to lower the price on the PC while not doing the same by pricing out a used 360 and accessories is disingenuous at best. I suggest you actually read and comprehend the conversation that is going on before you just throw yourself into it with guns blazing.

  161. Why argue? by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

    It's like arguing that a shovel is better than a rake.

    Different operating systems and different computers have different feature sets are are intended for different applications.

    I have Linux machines, Macs, Windows, and Solaris. Each has its place and each is useful. I don't really worry too much about which is "better".

    1. Re:Why argue? by trouser · · Score: 1

      An average home user probably wants email, web browser, word processor, spreadsheet maybe and a half way decent version of solitaire or minesweeper. You get all that with the shovel or the rake. The rake costs an extra $500 but it looks so cool you want to lick it. Your call.

      --
      Now wash your hands.
  162. Amortize it! by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

    Even if there is an Apple tax, amortize it over the life of the computer and it's pennies a day.

    The price of the computer is just about irrelevant when you consider the value of all the time you spend in front of it.

  163. Re:Starting a distro war. I'm so bad. by swillden · · Score: 1
    :-)

    Fedora has had repos installable as packages for a long time. CLick here to add the Adobe Flash repo, etc.

    Cool. Yes, the Debian world needs that as well.

    Maybe someday the Debian based systems will get bi-arch and make 64bit a seamless experience instead of basically stuffing a whole seperate 32 bit system into a chroot.

    Actually, last I heard the Debian team was working on multi-arch, rather than bi-arch. I won't go into the details, but it's a much more powerful and flexible concept. Of course, that also means it's more complex and slower to get done...

    Oh, and the current solution isn't to use a 32-bit chroot. What Debian systems do is install 32-bit binaries and libs in a particular set of paths. Effectively the same file structure as you'd get with bi-arch, but of course for now those 32-bit-files-in-64-bit-packages have to pretend to be 64 bit so that they can be installed and managed.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  164. The flawed "style" argument by surfingmarmot · · Score: 1

    I am so tired of the "all Apple gives for the extra charge is style" flawed analysis that I have to respond to this. It is utter nonsense--most Apple buyers, when pooled mention ease of use. power, flexibility and reliability over style. Style is the icing on the cake not the core reason to buy. This is the same bogus emotional ignore the facts appeal as the Republicans used to call the Democrats tax and spend, even though Republican presidents spend more and, worse, borrow to do it. Not quite the whole story, you are also paying a robust 32- and 64-bit UNIX with a remarkably easy to use GUI and free apps for video, photos, mail, web publishing, and more that few commercial apps rival n terms of ease of use. There are otehr platforms advantages too: I can run OS X, many falvors of Windows (in VM or mative boot), plus many flavors of UNIX and Linux in VM on one machine.On my 8-core 13GB Mac Pro right now I have running: OS X Leopard, Ubuntu Server 8.10, SuSe 10 desktop, and Window Vista Home Premium 64-bit. I am cross-developing OpenGL/SDL and Qt apps for all three platforms on OS X using UNIX tools. No other OS or System let's me do that on one box at one time. Plus Final Cut Studio kicks a*s compared to Similarly-priced Windows alternatives.

  165. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    If we're going that route, let's start checking the failure rate of the 360 versus failure rate of PC parts, and let's do a comparative overhead cost.

    Oh, and for every game you pay to play online, the same PC version doesn't require such nonsense.

    There's lots more to think about, we could keep this up all day. How about all that lost time waiting for your stuff to be repaired or replaced? There's the factor of convenience.

    All around, a PC is the way to go. Hell, we're already working on emulating the PS3 and the 360, and PS2 and XBOX emulation is nearly rock solid. PS3 Emulation won't really be possible without an 8 core machine and some killer programming, but it could be done. 360 Emulation would require at least a quad-core, but since the 360 uses almost identical hardware that the PS3 uses emulating one should lead to emulating the other eventually, once the hardware itself is understood.

    Give me a minute and let me reboot my computer into arcade mode so I can record you a video of something your 360 sure as hell can't do - let you program your own ultimate fighting game.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  166. What Software? by Plekto · · Score: 1

    My parents bought a G5 tower about a year and a half ago. New, shiny, and sleek. The machine came with all of the software that they needed.

    To date, they have installed the following applications that they've paid for(or cost money - they're not pirating it, either):

    Apple may be more expensive initially, but it's perfectly possible to pay the same as Linux for the software that you use. this blows a huge hole in Microsoft's claims.

  167. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by keithpreston · · Score: 1

    You can not build it for $200. The unfortunate problem is that a gaming PC must have a copy of Windows on it. A legitimate copy is going to run you $75-100 by itself. This is why I stopped building PCs myself, with a Windows License, Dell and HP will come out cheaper than parts. Unless of course you get sucked into the high markup "add-ons", it is usually a better deal. I'm sure they only pay in the $40-$50 range for the license which sucks because I not a volume dealer I get charged twice as much.

  168. Stupid article by Latinhypercube · · Score: 0

    Any idiot knows that Mac are double the price for the same functionality. That's if they even offer reasonable computers (core 2 duo tower anyone ?), which they don't. INDISPUTABLE EXCEPT BY MAC ZEALOTS FEELING THE PAIN OF THEIR OVERPRICED MAC PURCHASES & UPGRADES.

    1. Re:Stupid article by Jezza · · Score: 1

      What about the role of software in all this? When did you last buy a PC (I mean a computer running Windows) and get any useful software with it? You get a whole lot of useless trialware, that will reappear when you reinstall Windows from the image they put on the system.

      Macs come with (I'm not joking with this stuff) X11, a diskcopier (It's called Disk Utility), professional developer tools (the exact same tool chain used by Apple and professional developers, not some half-baked "lite" version), as well as all the more well known stuff like iPhoto, iMovie et al. Macs also come with PIM software, a "couch" interface (Front Row), backup software, PDF writer ...

      I guess none of this is worth anything? You just want Notepad and Solitaire.

      What's the fixation with the tower again? What exactly are you putting in there? (Don't say RAM, please don't say RAM - you can add RAM to iMacs 8Gb of it)

      Now who makes these wonderful PCs you guys keep banging on about? (The cheap ones, that are brilliantly put together and not built down to a price in a way only an accountant could possibly love.) 'Cos I don't know these machines, I really don't. When I wanted a system like that, I ended up building the thing - not because I wanted to (heaven knows I didn't WANT TO) but because the "big brands" either make systems that cost a fortune or the same people make something so dreadfully nasty I didn't want it at any price (and I'll admit they were cheap. Now honestly, that's not a great use of my time - but I at least have a system that didn't cost a fortune and it isn't totally horrible. Clearly I've not ruined it with Windows.

      So yes, I have a Mac - and my "other computer" is a self build. Do I think the Mac is "overpriced"? No, clearly Apple have made a more solid system than many of the OEMs do, and that's reflected in the cost. But the point is, it IS reflected: Macs are wonderfully put together. At work we have a Mac Pro, that thing is fantastically well put together - no PC OEM makes a system this well at ANY price. If a Mac Pro more expensive than a Dell Inspiron? Yeah, a heck of a lot. But these things are as different as they can be. Compare it to a Dell Precision, with similar specs, the Dell is at least as much, usually quite a bit more.

      We end up at the point where Apple don't make a system at every price point - but we knew that. We don't end up at: Apple Macs cost more than PCs. Sure, there are a few gaps, where you can't get a Mac EXACTLY to the spec we might want, so if we want a Mac we have to compromise. Either live without something we wanted - say a separate tower (that we wanted for some inexplicable reason) or spend more to get a system that exceeds your minimum requirements. What I think really galls Windows buyers is people DO. People actually care about build of the system and/or the OS (and hence applications) enough to not plonk down on some Dell or HP.

      If for you a "cheap" PC with Vista (or XP if you can still get that on the PC you've selected) is what you want - great, I'm happy for you.

      But pardon me for giving a damn about the computer I use and the OS I run.

  169. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    If we're going that route, let's start checking the failure rate of the 360 versus failure rate of PC parts, and let's do a comparative overhead cost.

    You mean the overhead cost of having the thing paid to be shipped back to Microsoft to be fixed? You mean all of 0 dollars? Secondly, I have not had a single issue with my 360 in 3 years nor anyone else I know.

    Oh, and for every game you pay to play online, the same PC version doesn't require such nonsense.

    I already factored in the price of Xbox Live into the cost. You really seem to have poor reading comprehension. I'll quote myself:

    Throw in 2 years of Xbox Live and it's still less than your purported system.

    Xbox Live via subscription cards has will cost you around 35-45 dollars depending on where you buy them. Adding that to the cost of a used 360 with used HD and used controller is barely 320 bucks.

    There's lots more to think about, we could keep this up all day. How about all that lost time waiting for your stuff to be repaired or replaced? There's the factor of convenience.

    So you never have to wait for things to be repaired or replaced when you have a PC? That's an amusing claim.

    All around, a PC is the way to go.

    In your opinion. Others would disagree.

    Hell, we're already working on emulating the PS3 and the 360

    Yeah and it's going to take huge computing requirements to do so and you are never going to get remotely the same level of support for games that the consoles will provide. You still don't get full compatibility for all PS2 games on PC emulators and those have been out for ages.

    and PS2 and XBOX emulation is nearly rock solid.

    Sure for a fraction of all games. There are tons of PS2 games that have little or no compatibility.

    PS3 Emulation won't really be possible without an 8 core machine and some killer programming, but it could be done.

    So basically you spend more on the PC to emulate the PS3 than to just buy a PS3? Brilliant idea!

    360 Emulation would require at least a quad-core, but since the 360 uses almost identical hardware that the PS3 uses emulating one should lead to emulating the other eventually, once the hardware itself is understood.

    Actually not it won't. The hardware of the two systems is drastically different in many cases.

    Give me a minute and let me reboot my computer into arcade mode so I can record you a video of something your 360 sure as hell can't do - let you program your own ultimate fighting game.

    Because most gamers care about that? Oh wait, they don't.

  170. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    Go to pricewatch.com. Even NEWEGG advertises on Pricewatch, and they don't show up very often at all in my searches for the exact hardware I want.

    Funny cause I did that and it doesn't help your case.

    2.6ghz AM2 process: $52 9800GTX+ 512MB: $122 2 1 TB HDDs: $162 4 GB RAM: $36. 700 W PSU: $40

    That's still a price of $412 all from the lowest prices on all those items at pricewatch. Including a motherboard makes it over 450 dollars. Sorry, but that didn't help your claim.

  171. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    No but a lot of people rather not have cables running everywhere and unless you have your PC and 360 in the same room you'll end up running cable.

    Secondly, MS likes to brag that the 360 is cheaper than the PS3. However the PS3 has more features out of the box, like wifi so you don't have to clutter your house up so everyone thinks you're a dirty pikey. If you want a comprable package from MS it costs as much if not more than a PS3 because MS does charge extortionate rates for their peripherals knowing full well that people will want them.

  172. Linux users are the ones paying the tax by sslk · · Score: 1

    Why are linux users scratching their heads?
    Because they are the ones paying for software that they do not use!
    Regardless of whether the machine they buy is set up with MS or Mac software, they have to pay for a preloaded OS that they have no intention of using.
    How bout an article on how buyers should not be forced to buy ANY proprietary, expensive, unnecessary, software with their hardware purchase?
    How bout giving consumers the choice to keep $150 of their hard earned money in exchange for not recieving software that they have no intention to use?

    1. Re:Linux users are the ones paying the tax by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      Not if you buy the components and put it together
      yourself... Not that everybody wants to do that but it isn't exactly a difficult task once you know what each bit is and what it does... even easier if you buy a barebones machine.

      Pitty it isn't so easy with a laptop.

  173. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    Oh, and for every game you pay to play online, the same PC version doesn't require such nonsense.

    Well unless you want to play an MMO that isn't a Korean POS. The same 35 dollars I pay a year for Live would buy me less than 3 months of playing either WoW, EQ/EQ2, EVE Online, etc.

  174. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    "You mean the overhead cost of having the thing paid to be shipped back to Microsoft to be fixed?"

    No, the price you're going to have to pay later on for their next-gen system in order to recoup from the major losses this system has caused.

    "So you never have to wait for things to be repaired or replaced when you have a PC? That's an amusing claim."

    I can go pick up a part needed to fix my system in ten minutes or less and have it installed and running. Have fun waiting weeks for your replacement 360!

    "You still don't get full compatibility for all PS2 games on PC emulators and those have been out for ages."

    The only incompatible games are the new ones being released on the PS2 (Persona 4, for instance) and usually the only reason for that incompatibility is the BIOS revision one uses.

    "There are tons of PS2 games that have little or no compatibility."

    See above.

    "So basically you spend more on the PC to emulate the PS3 than to just buy a PS3? Brilliant idea!"

    By the time it works, the hardware required to run it will be cheaper than the system at initial launch. You don't think about time, do ya?

    "Actually not it won't. The hardware of the two systems is drastically different in many cases."

    BZZT. Both use IBM's Cell-based hardware. Better go re-check who has investments in which console.

    "Because most gamers care about that? Oh wait, they don't."

    Gamers care about entertainment value per dollar. I'm getting FAR more out of my second-hand or first-sourced stuff than you are with a next-gen console. You're just NOW getting stuff like Netflix and whatnot for your 360 - we've had it since it was out. The PC gets all the fun stuff, consoles just try to play catch-up and lock you into their stuff.

    Your main argument, way up there, was pretty much hinting at entertainment value. Try beating a PC in the hands of someone that knows how to use it. You won't. Consoles are copying computers, nowdays. Might as well buy a computer!

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  175. Re:Starting a distro war. I'm so bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    RPMs and DEBs are just different. While I am a fan of apt-get, they make a lot of assumptions and take away from a lot of the configurability that an rpm allows. Of course, the same old argument between Linuc and Windows in general, is that it is whether or not it is useful to the average individual to take the time to learn the difference, and as usual no, but just the same, that is no reason to take such configurability away. Most people never install anything ever, especially not system "stuff". So where is the line? Each to their own :)
     
    I find it funny, and a little sad when I hear people trying to tell other people what to do or how to standardize Linux. If you make hardware and you would like your hardware to work with other peoples hardware, and both pieces of hardware are in development, then there is room to suggest a standard and find some way for your stuff to work together in the end. On the otherhand, if someone writes a great program, but only specifies dependencies in a README, but never bothers to package it, you have three(ish) basic options: 1) Deal with the fact that it isn't package and compile it yourself. 2) wait for someone to package it for your system, then install it, or 3) Package it yourself.
     
    Not to make it out to be more work than it is, but packaging takes time and effort. From what I have seen, programmers are almost always a different group of people from package maintainers. Any project that packages its own software likely has the job of just package maintenance.
     
    deb packages are also very configurable. I don't think there is anything they can't do. Technically, there is nothing in its design to stop someone from a deb package running the binary every time you install it and never actually installing anything. Just the same, debs can install repositories, it just isn't standard to do that. Personally, I think it is better to let people choose whether or not they want their installed third party software to be self maintaining along with the rest of the system. If there is a repo, make note of it on the website and in the documentation. All a deb has is metadata, install script, uninstall script, and files. This means debs can do anything scripts and files can do. :) as for what apt-get does is store the metadata such that it can know what script sets have already been run, and if others need to be run, etc. The limits comes down to what the package maintainer chooses to put in their install script.
     
    rpms are easier to build and maintain. debs are much more of a pain in the ass. debs are convenient for the vast majority of users, and they are a lot of work. Would deb users like to see every project out there have a deb available? Of course! But at the sacrifice of development time, or your own? Even if debs were "always better in every way", you are only talking about an end product and not the time that went into putting it together.
     
    So whenever I hear someone say "I wish there was a deb", I say "Your probably not alone, why don't you go do that! Never done package maintenance? Wonderful, here's the manual and if next week you are still confused, i'd be happy to walk you through it."
     
    Linux is about personal responsibility that can ideally easily benefit everyone, imo. Not everyone can really handle that.

  176. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    And you're not paying attention to CPU/Mobo/Memory combo deals, either.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  177. Re:Just use Ninnle! by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

    There is no Ninnle?

    Bull.

    I wrote Ninnle!

    I just haven't publicized it, so it's not on Google!

    You can't prove a negative!!!!!11lol!!

    --
    "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
  178. Yes, google earth works on linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://help.ubuntu.com/community/GoogleEarth

    Just enable the medibuntu repository and run apt-get.
    It's been that way for several years now.

  179. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    Private servers. I don't pay for WoW (not that I'd even play it,) and there are tons of free MMOs out there that do not suck. And Graphics do not make the game.

    And Maietz: Gunz is not a Korean POS. Do you even bother looking that deep into the gaming community or are you just a surface corporate player?

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  180. Just the kind of guy MS needs.... by Jerry · · Score: 1

    http://www.groklaw.net/articlebasic.php?story=20071023002351958

    There is a section on evangelism steps to take to build support, which he calls guerilla marketing, or "The Slog" and and that's the section that includes using supposedly "independent" analysts and consultants:

    -- Analysts: Analysts sell out - that's their business model. But they are very concerned that they never look like they are selling out, so that makes them very prickly to work with.

    -- Consultants: These guys are your best bets as moderators. Get a well-known consultant on your side early, but don't let him publish anything blatantly pro-Microsoft. Then, get him to propose himself to the conference organizers as a moderator, whenever a panel opportunity comes up. Since he's well- known, but apparently independent, he'll be accepted - one less thing for the constantly-overworked conference organizer to worry about, right?

    The source for the original document written by James Plamondon, first trainer of "Technical Evangelists" (TE) for Microsoft, is at the Comes vs Microsoft lawsuit website. An article titled "Evangelism is War!", px03096.pdf, page 53.

    The "Slog" and the "Stacked Panel" are very interesting reads and describes EXACTLY how Microsoft stuffed the ISO committees when it stuffed the OOXML "standard" down IT's throat. It also explains what they are doing NOW with the European FOSS Strategy paper. http://wikileaks.org/wiki/How_to_Hijack_an_EU_Open_Source_Strategy_Paper

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  181. Doubly weird by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    It's doubly weird because Microsoft only makes software (and a few peripherals) for PCs. The campaign would make a lot more sense if it was being run by one of the companies who actually make the computers that are featured...like Dell, HP, etc.

    Think about it -- this is a Microsoft ad campaign that says absolutely nothing about any Microsoft product whatsoever. It seems like they are running from their own brand rather than executing a strategy to improve it.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  182. Hardware lock-in is where that tax is going... by gosand · · Score: 1

    I am not a Mac person... at all. I used a friends once, and I just do not like it. They don't make sense to me. I understand they make perfect sense to a lot of people... just not me.

    But where that "hidden" tax is going is hardware support, or call it lock-in if you will. It's a different approach, where they make sure that your SYSTEM works, as opposed to MS where they don't directly control the hardware. While you're locked into more expensive hardware with Mac, it works and works well. People are obviously willing to pay for that. And support, which I understand is pretty good with Mac.

    I'd love to hear Microsoft's view on what their tax offers the consumer.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  183. You've all got it wrong .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft isn't saying you shouldn't buy Macs because Windows is cheaper, it is preparing the ground for Windows 7 pricing that will make a Dell + Windows 7 more expensive than an Apple. Then it will be Windows with the 'cool factor'.

    MS knows this will work. It brought out the Zune as a cheaper iPod and that failed. It brought out Vista as a cheaper OS/X and that failed (~20% market share even though it was shoved down everyone's throat). Now MS understands: make it $500 more expensive and everyone will rush to buy it because that extra cost makes it cool.

    (Plus they need the money).

  184. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    No, the price you're going to have to pay later on for their next-gen system in order to recoup from the major losses this system has caused.

    That's no price I've paid or will pay. You're just inventing stuff out of thin air now.

    I can go pick up a part needed to fix my system in ten minutes or less and have it installed and running. Have fun waiting weeks for your replacement 360!

    So in the meantime I'd just play on my PC and it won't really matter much.

    The only incompatible games are the new ones being released on the PS2 (Persona 4, for instance) and usually the only reason for that incompatibility is the BIOS revision one uses.

    No, there are plenty of old games with poor support if any. Check out the list at PCSX2 and you will see that they don't support even remotely close to all PS2 games and it's one of the better emulators.

    See above.

    It's a bullshit claim. Just going to the supported games list on an emulator site shows this.

    By the time it works, the hardware required to run it will be cheaper than the system at initial launch. You don't think about time, do ya?

    Or instead of having to wait years to get partial support, one can just buy a PS3 now and have been playing the games while you wait 5 years to get support for 1/4 of all PS3 games. Still a brilliant plan!

    BZZT. Both use IBM's Cell-based hardware. Better go re-check who has investments in which console.

    BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA. No they don't. The 360 uses a 3 core Xenon PowerPC processor. The Cell processor is different architecture. Way to make yourself look stupid.

    Gamers care about entertainment value per dollar. I'm getting FAR more out of my second-hand or first-sourced stuff than you are with a next-gen console.

    So in your opinion it's better. Yet millions of console players (or like me who play both PC and consoles) thoroughly enjoy having their console and it's games. You keep acting as if your own preferences are the preferences of every gamer.

    You're just NOW getting stuff like Netflix and whatnot for your 360 - we've had it since it was out.

    Huh? I don't get why you act like I have no PC. Just because I own a console doesn't mean I've never had a computer. I've been streaming movies from Netflix on my PC since it first started.

    The PC gets all the fun stuff, consoles just try to play catch-up and lock you into their stuff.

    That's great, but I also have 5 PCs so this claim that somehow I can never do anything that involves a PC is quite bizarre.

    Your main argument, way up there, was pretty much hinting at entertainment value. Try beating a PC in the hands of someone that knows how to use it.

    I have and do all the time. I've been doing PC gaming for 20+ years now. Just because I play console games doesn't exclude me from being able to play PC games. Again this makes for bizarre claims on your part.

    You won't. Consoles are copying computers, nowdays. Might as well buy a computer!

    I already own computers, multiples in fact, and have since some of the earliest PCs came out.

  185. first purchase by claire_rand · · Score: 1

    how many people by a mac as their first computer? how many a windows based pc? how many buy a mac after having owned a windows pc? and vice-versa? never yet seen that analysis. could tell you a lot. you'd expect people to pick one and stick with it, to avoid replacing software, if theres a significant number of people for whom thats not enough of an issue to stay the same. thats a problem for one side or the other. speaking as a mac owner, and former windows pc owner. I was *happy* to spend about £500 over the odds to get a MPB compaired to what I could hve spent on a windows pc laptop, the lack of time spent keeping it running *to me* was worth it over so far two years.

  186. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    LOL, I love these shifting goalposts every time your claim gets knocked down. BTW this still doesn't help your claim and actually only further confirms what I said. The cheapest cpu/mobo/memory combo for what you stated added on to the price of all the other components still has the total price of 440 dollars. Keep flopping around though, it's hilarious to watch. So what next? I need to price them at some super secret discount club that only you have access to?

  187. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    Private servers.

    Oh yes, what great fun to play on servers where there is rampant cheating and the runners of the server give away all sorts of powerful stuff to themselves and friends.

    I don't pay for WoW (not that I'd even play it,)

    Good for you. The whole point of bringing it up was to dispel the notion that you can play all PC games allow you to play online for free which is just false.

    and there are tons of free MMOs out there that do not suck.

    Doubtful. There may be 1 or 2 but I've played plenty most of the free MMOs you will see listed on a site like MMORPG.com and they are overwhelmingly shit.

    And Graphics do not make the game.

    Never made the claim so I have no clue what this is a response to.

    And Maietz: Gunz is not a Korean POS.

    Did I ever say it was?

    Do you even bother looking that deep into the gaming community or are you just a surface corporate player?

    Do you think I care that you pretend to be some sort of badass because you try to act nonconformist?

  188. As long as you remember = 6 years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boy, you're showing your age.

  189. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by moosesocks · · Score: 1

    The DIY $200 PC notion always makes me apprehensive. Although you can indeed get good deals by using high-end components from last year, inexpensive power supplies tend to be complete rubbish (talking from experience)

    Spending $50 for a decent PSU, in addition to a bit more for a nice case (if you value aesthetics) puts you well above the $200 cost.

    If you value reliability, and want a few modern features (eg. a hard drive that holds more than 80gb), you'll probably end up spending closer to $400 or $500. Still not a bad deal, but considerably less of a bargain.

    --
    -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
  190. Mod's, WAKE UP!...Here is +++oppurtunity! by rts008 · · Score: 1

    In short plan around what a user might do, and not what they should do.

    Excellent advice!

    The sad thing though, is after a stint at tech support, you realize that your imagination cannot grasp the reality of what your users may try! GHAHHH!

    "Now, could you explain again how you got that LS-120 disc in your floppy drive...without a frickken' HAMMER?" [yes, I did get one of these calls!]

    --
    Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  191. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    "That's no price I've paid or will pay. You're just inventing stuff out of thin air now."

    No, I speak from actual business experience. Go run one for yourself sometime and you'll understand.

    "BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA. No they don't. The 360 uses a 3 core Xenon PowerPC processor. The Cell processor is different architecture. Way to make yourself look stupid."

    From the PS3 site:
    "PowerPC-base Core @3.2GHz "
    From the 360 site:
    "IBM PowerPC-based CPU"

    It's the Cell Architecture - go look at the damned SDKs.

    "Huh? I don't get why you act like I have no PC. Just because I own a console doesn't mean I've never had a computer. I've been streaming movies from Netflix on my PC since it first started."

    You're arguing 360 vs PC - you stick with your 360 and quit diverting by mentioning other hardware you own - it's YOUR 360 vs MY PC.

    "That's great, but I also have 5 PCs so this claim that somehow I can never do anything that involves a PC is quite bizarre.

    Your main argument, way up there, was pretty much hinting at entertainment value. Try beating a PC in the hands of someone that knows how to use it.

    I have and do all the time. I've been doing PC gaming for 20+ years now. Just because I play console games doesn't exclude me from being able to play PC games. Again this makes for bizarre claims on your part.

    You won't. Consoles are copying computers, nowdays. Might as well buy a computer!

    I already own computers, multiples in fact, and have since some of the earliest PCs came out."

    See above. Stick with your argument and quit detracting by mentioning other things.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  192. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Khyber · · Score: 1

    "Oh yes, what great fun to play on servers where there is rampant cheating and the runners of the server give away all sorts of powerful stuff to themselves and friends."

    Get honest people and start your own server. It's not that hard.

    "Good for you. The whole point of bringing it up was to dispel the notion that you can play all PC games allow you to play online for free which is just false."

    See above.

    "Doubtful. There may be 1 or 2 but I've played plenty most of the free MMOs you will see listed on a site like MMORPG.com and they are overwhelmingly shit."

    Note how you first say MMO then say MMORPG - I just talking the whole MMO genre, which is NOT limited to RPG games.

    "Never made the claim so I have no clue what this is a response to."

    It's not a response to anything - you're just looking for things to nitpick at. Were it a response to anything, it would have had it's own little quote before being mentioned.

    "Did I ever say it was?"

    You mention Korean gaming as a whole as a POS since you do not list specific games. You made a blanket statement that is grossly untrue. I just pointed out one example.

    "Do you think I care that you pretend to be some sort of badass because you try to act nonconformist?"

    No, I know you don't care, you're too busy being an elitist. I don't act like a noncomformist, either, quit assuming.

    Let's break this own to the ORIGINAL QUOTE that started this mess:

    "If you want to play any games from the last couple of years you would have spent at least 670 if not more on your PC."

    In your own post here you use my site and find out you can build my system for about $440. And that's mid-range. A low-range system to play any games made within the past couple of years would cost LESS! 8800 graphics cards are still good! That old x2 4400 will do the trick! that 2GB of PC-4200 Works!

    YOUR ORIGINAL CLAIM, THE ONE I QUOTED, IS BLATANTLY FALSE. You can BUY A CURRENT DELL FOR LESS THAN $670 and run Crysis.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  193. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by GNUbuntu · · Score: 1

    No, I speak from actual business experience. Go run one for yourself sometime and you'll understand.

    So you're telling me that PC hardware manufacturers don't pass on the cost of returns and things in the pricing of their items? The fact of the matter is the cost I paid for any other person returning their Xbox is negligble at best and in fact I paid less than the early adopters.

    It's the Cell Architecture - go look at the damned SDKs.

    No, the Xenon is a modified version of the SPEs that the Cell processor also happens to use because they are both PPC processors, but the Xenon is not a Cell processor as they have a different architecture. If the 360 had a Cell processor, than why was Sony touting that the PS3 was better because of it's use of the Cell? That makes absolutely no sense.

    You're arguing 360 vs PC - you stick with your 360 and quit diverting by mentioning other hardware you own - it's YOUR 360 vs MY PC.

    No, that's not what I've been arguing at all. I was arguing against the claim that console gaming was more expensive than PC gaming which is what the person I first responded to was trying to claim. I on the other hand was showing that this wasn't the case. It had nothing to do with whether PCs or consoles was superior to one another. That was some bizarre nonsense you interjected.

    Your main argument, way up there, was pretty much hinting at entertainment value.

    No, it wasn't. You bringing in Netflix or something else had nothing at all to do with any of my claims which were strictly on the price of console gaming (in this case the price of buying a 360) to the price of PC gaming (the price of buying a PC to run modern games).

    Try beating a PC in the hands of someone that knows how to use it.

    I do. All the time on my PC.

    See above. Stick with your argument and quit detracting by mentioning other things.

    Stick with what argument? That consoles are not more expensive than buying a PC to game? I've been sticking with that the whole time and have shown that they aren't more expensive.

  194. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by santiagoanders · · Score: 1

    $25 2.3 GHz AMD X2 dual core - Newegg w/ coupon
    $15, AR - 4GB Corsair DDR2 memory - frys.com
    $15 rifle CPU cooler, fry's
    $58, EVGA SLI MB, from EVGA B-stock
    $35 and $34, ARs - 2 9600 GSO's in SLI (both from Newegg)
    $38, AR 650 Watt OCZ StealthXStream PS (Newegg)
    $40, 500GB hard drive - Ebay /w coupon
    $8 SLI bridge - ebay
    $15 - old case
    $15 - old DVD drive
    $60 - Windows vista home retail, ebay after MS CB
    $30 - razer mouse
    $free - old keyboard
    All of these prices include shipping (AR = After Rebate)

    Total: $388
    most of the above found on slickdeals.net

    The key here is wait for a deal, don't just go out and buy.
    Also, average retail for XBox 360 games is always more than for the average PC game (compare call of duty, left 4 dead, etc).

    --
    "There can be little doubt that union activities lead to continuous and progressive inflation." F. A. Hayek
  195. apple hardware problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've had lots of macs over the years. I've always had hardware problems. On an aluminum powerbook: a broken hinge that rendered the machine useless. On an iBook: scratches on the screen from the keyboard. On a previous iBook: a defective ethernet port and broken power cable. Actually, I've had to replace 3 power cords over the years because of poor design. The thin white cords are not very durable. My current Macbook would have scratches on the screen if I did not keep a cloth between it and the keyboard when closed.

  196. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by samriel · · Score: 1

    I like your point but this one is wrong:

    least 670 if not more on your PC.

    My Gaming PC, recently retired to running media center...athlon2800 overclocked, NVIDIA6800, NF7-Sv2 MOBO, 80GB hard drive, 2GB ram....have had it for well more than two years and would play any game on the market. You can put that system together for under $200 now adays easy.

    Dammit, Moore and his law! All of our thousand-dollar gaming rigs are crap in a year and a half!!!

  197. Re:How does dragging in a video "suck donkey balls by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    > Since all you have to do is drag it into iTunes, I disagree. If there's a codec issue you may have to transcode, but again that's one more click... ...which leads to the inevitable question: "What the f*ck do you want iTunes? Why don't you tell me?"

    It's "information hiding at it's finest".

    "use some 3rd party app foo" is NOT acceptable.

    It's a major FAIL that iTunes doesn't handle this on it's own.

    This is perhaps GEEK friendly (perhaps) but it is hardly n00b friendly.

    Other devices (esp Archos) are much more accomodating.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  198. Re:"Meanwhile Linux users everywhere....." by Abreu · · Score: 1

    Could you give more details of your configuration?

    --
    No sig for the moment.
  199. Streisand Effect anyone by toriver · · Score: 1

    I am waiting for Toyota to talk about the "BMW Tax".

    Oh, wait, they are not going to because it is SILLY to name your competitor because then they will think of the competitor. Toyota ads and campaigns therefore talk about Toyota brands and products.

    So, hey, Microsoft, keep mentioning Apple and Macs. Put those names into people's minds. Heck, you hardly have any brands left yourself...

  200. How many people are able to follow directions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > I had to follow some [...] instructions

    This.

    The inability to do this (and sometimes the inability to Google for instructions) is why average people fail to be able to do simple computing tasks.

    Linux isn't too hard for most people. It's too different and scary. The people who can't figure out Linux aren't any better at using Windows, they just have marketers making them feel better about their incompetence.

  201. Missing software by tbuskey · · Score: 1

    Antivirus

    Antispyware

    Defragmentation utility

    Remote Access (Windows Pro upgrade at a minimum)

  202. Re:Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching by gbarules2999 · · Score: 1

    It's already installed, you insufferable clod!

  203. Linux users everywhere are scratching their heads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I can say is ..... fsckin' onanists

  204. Re:the good, the bad, the humorous, and the confus by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

    And the tops of the keyboard keys would erode over time from my fingernails with normal typing.

    You're supposed to cut those every few weeks, you know ;)

  205. Re:Meanwhile Linux users everywhere are scratching by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure OpenOffice comes preinstalled on Ubuntu... so there's nothing to figure out.

  206. Re:How does dragging in a video "suck donkey balls by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

    "use some 3rd party app foo" is NOT acceptable.

    I just listed that for geek cred, I actually use Quicktime with AVI files I have elsewhere.

    This is perhaps GEEK friendly (perhaps) but it is hardly n00b friendly.

    Which is fine since pure noob's aren't going to be doing this. Anyone even downloading torrents is outside noob status.

    It's certainly more than acceptable for a case that not many people will be using. It certainly does not "suck donkey balls". I have had to go through video contortions that did indeed "suck donkey balls" and if you think one transcoding step is that, you are way spoiled my friend!

    Other devices (esp Archos) are much more accomodating.

    Since the management and use of them is less easy, I actually disagree on that point - at best they are equal in different ways, but certainly not in the ways noobs would care about (since they seem to be the primary audience of concern).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  207. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by Draek · · Score: 1

    Just as I doubt the Microsoft Police will come after someone because they're using an OEM license in place of a retail one, or because the university-going child lets his parents use their computer with the free Windows license he got from his university.

    Still, legality is legality and if we're gonna ignore that, we may as well go to ThePirateBay and be done with it.

    --
    No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
  208. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Xbox Live Gold is $30 a month if you buy it in January. So 5 years = $150

    That's all you need $319 for 5 years of gaming.

    Wowowow hold on there, you've made a huge mistake.
    You just said XBox Live Gold is $30 a month, and then you say that 5 years is $150. 30*12*5 is not 150! It's actually 1800! So it's not $319 for 5 years of gaming plus games, it's $1800 for 5 years of gaming plus games.

  209. On even terms- AC to AC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, they need to change the error message to something like:

    'Dear Windows Monkey, what part of it's already installed do you not understand?'

    with two buttons:
    "Continue-'cause that's all I know"
    and
    "Nevermind, I'm getting a clue finally"

    What we are scratching our heads about is deciding if this thread will be fun enough to troll, or not, while all you Apple and MS twist each others tails.
    Most of the time it's pretty comical, but sometimes just plain sad...most times it's both.

    It's very similar to watching the 'Special Olympics'.

  210. Seriously?!? by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

    Holy crap man, scrap all of that and upgrade already! Fedora 10 has been out for months and Fedora 11 is coming out in about a month. You really really really should no longer be using Fedora Core 5, nobody is going to be able to help you with it anymore and I don't even think the repositories for it are still up!

    Just install Fedora 10 clean and let yum (the package manager used by Fedora) handle all the hard work with installing things. `yum install gimp` will install gimp for you and all of it's dependancies, it really couldn't be simplier.

    --
    "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    1. Re:Seriously?!? by Kabuthunk · · Score: 1

      That's also perplexed me about Linux In three short years since it was released, FC 5 is virtually worthless, and next to nothing is available for it. I don't suppose upgrading each version when they come out (which seems to be several times a year) can be done without a full reinstall, can they? The idea of having to reinstall everything on the computer on a yearly basis would be rather annoying.

      Maybe I'll look further into this Ubuntu... I'm probably wrong, but I thought that was fairly stable version-wise.

      --
      Planet Zebeth - Metroid with a twist
    2. Re:Seriously?!? by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      Fedora does have the ability to smoothely update from version to version, though I don't think it's officially supported. Personally I just have a seperate home partition that I leave alone, installing new versions is about a 20 minute job for me. If you don't like the 6-month release schedule then I'd suggest going with a distro that takes it slower, Debian perhaps. The Open Source scene changes very rapidly though, a lot has changed in 3 years.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
  211. Struck a nerve in mac fans? by firesyde424 · · Score: 1

    So the misleading ads from Apple were okay, but the Microsoft ads that point to the higher average price of Macs isn't?

  212. Wrong: Linux DLL names encode ABI compatibility by stevenj · · Score: 1

    The .so name of a shared library under Linux encodes not only whether the library has been revised, but also indicates ABI compatibility.

    If the library authors know what they are doing, when they release a new version of a library they will set the .so version number (different from the human-targeted source-code version number) to reflect which previous versions of the library the new release is compatible with. As a result, ABI-compatible software does not need to be recompiled.

    See, for example, the shared-lib versioning documentation for GNU libtool.

    --
    If a thing is not diminished by being shared, it is not rightly owned if it is only owned & not shared. S. Augustine
    1. Re:Wrong: Linux DLL names encode ABI compatibility by lokedhs · · Score: 1
      You'd expect that the GCC guys knows what they are doing, but stdc++ suffers from such versioning problems.

      The actual cause of this issue is a versioning incompatibility between different versions of libstdc++-so.6.

    2. Re:Wrong: Linux DLL names encode ABI compatibility by stevenj · · Score: 1

      It's quite hard to keep C++ libraries ABI compatible across releases, because of fragile base class problems as well as ABI changes with new releases of C++ compilers (grrr).

      If your ABI changes, then your .so version number has to reflect this and software needs to be recompiled. My point was that, contrary to Tweenk's claims, if the ABI of a new library version is backwards compatible, the Unix/Linux .so versioning scheme can reflect this and software doesn't need to be recompiled.

      With C libraries, it's usually possible to maintain ABI compatibility even when adding new features. Unfortunately, proper .so versioning cannot fix the many ways in which C++ sucks.

      --
      If a thing is not diminished by being shared, it is not rightly owned if it is only owned & not shared. S. Augustine
  213. What ever by MrDERP · · Score: 1

    I give approximately 2 sh*ts about this.

  214. Hypocrites... by WoollyMittens · · Score: 1

    People who complain about the "Apple Tax" shouldn't wear Levi jeans, Nike shoes or drink Coca Cola either.

  215. i7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just build your own i7 ftw
    its fun, fast and FUCKING SWEET

  216. What? by dafing · · Score: 1
    I cant believe what you just said, seriously my jaw dropped! :)

    I'm a New Zealander who had a 3rd Generation 15GB iPod. I bought the remote at a later date, and loved it fine. I dont see why having the hold button at the top (or bottom) is right/wrong. I'm sorry it was opposite to how you wanted it ok? But really, thats like complaining to Toyota when you wanted the gauges in a different order than what they went with. (sorry to use a car analogy)

    I need a new iPod, and basically the new iPod Classic is my only choice. I'm waiting until the big 3.0 iPhone OS release, hoping a newer model will come out with new features.

    I dont like the new iPod classic OS, the way it does half a menu on the left, and then on the right random album art? Is that right? I dont like the idea of it anyway.

    Anyway, you really cant complain about everything Apple does if you only had one of their products like 5 years ago. They're had a whole 3 newer models since then, we are up to Gen 6 with the Classic, and Apple is slow to make whole new generations, they are not like Dell.

    I hope you use an iPod someday soon! Your problems you mentioned with your 3rd Generation, I had NONE of those and still love my 3rd Gen, I'll be buried with it :P

    --
    --- ...or a new slashdot signature. Dear aunt, let's set so double the killer delete select all
  217. Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "A Microsoft-sponsored report that describes a hidden "Apple tax" has fallen flat among the technology press.

    Everyone knows that the technology press are nothing but a bunch of Apple shills.

  218. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by Daisys_Uncle · · Score: 1
    Try and try again...

    Xbox Live Gold is $30 a month if you buy it in January. So 5 years = $150

    30 * 12 * 5 != 150

    30 * 12 * 5 = 1800

  219. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1

    I was playing plenty of modern games, given I couldnt do Crysis at any real entertaining level, but I could play most of the games on the shelves easily with my 6800, I guess I should have mentioned the 6800 was modded a bit. But if I am not looking for 100+fps I could easily have upgraded my PC for sub $200 and I would still be under the $650 mark. In fact I did when my mobo fried just the other day, bought an X2 with 2GB Ram and an 8800. That lets me fly just fine.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  220. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1
    I would agree with what you posted but you have a system that is overkill. With the exception of the Video, almost all hardware right now is light years ahead of the Gaming crowd. But intel/amd marketing is really good so us whitebox individuals will keep upgrading. $200 was the low end. you dont NEED a DC for any game. you dont NEED a burner, state of the art mobo, power supply, Ram.

    Dont get me wrong, I build for speed, and I am 100% with you on the whitebox vs brand pricing. But unless you need cutting edge, $200 will get you a gaming pc and $500 will get you a damn good one.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  221. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1

    Holy hell, where do you shop? Best Buy? Vid Card: Nvidia 9500 $50 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130378 550W power supply $23 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817170010 And these are brand new parts, lucky for us we can hit e-bay or craigslist and get em used if necessary...The only real thing you have to worry about in a system is the graphics card. I dont think even crysis cares all that much about your mobo, psu, processor (within reason), and hard drive.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  222. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1

    Finally, a post I can get on board with! Yes you are correct, the $200 PC is going to have 2 gen old parts, but if you know what you are looking for in PSUs and Vid Cards you can slash prices easily. Problem is, people like to brag about their systems, and if you are going to get into that game you need to spend $500+

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  223. Well Duh, Microsoft! by tekshogun · · Score: 1

    I have seen the new "comparison" commercials with people running back and forth between Mac and "PC" systems and finally walking out of the door with a PC and then they get a bunch of money or something stupid like that and this report, DUMB ALL DUMB. I am an avid user of both Windows installed machines as well as Macs and I can say honestly, and anyone that has ever used both on a regular basis should agree, that they both suck as much as the other. I dare not throw Linux into the mix because of the dozens of flavors of Linux and BSD that I have used over almost the entire decade, the only useful ones have been dedicated firewalls, web servers, and FTP servers. You want stability and efficiency. Build me a bad ass windows shell like GNOME or KDE or even Windows 3.x that runs everything we need today and but runs off of DOS. Ok, that is crazy, but it is wishful thinking and me living a little in the past.

  224. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by sexconker · · Score: 1

    What the FUCK.
    $200 will not get you a gaming PC.

  225. Does this feel like..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This feels like Charles Mansion telling us how bad Jeffery Dahlmer is!

  226. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1

    Yes it will, you just wont brag about it to your friends. $30-HD $20 Power Supply $15 case $40CPU/Mobo Combo $20 2GB RAM $50 Vid Card $15 CD ROM. Viola, sub $200 PC. Sure you wont get the bragging right's of a cutting edge Video card or the overkill of a quad core CPU. But you will play any game on the market today.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  227. Lemmings did it 20 years ago. :-P by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have in general set the development of computer science back about 15 years.

    I'll take "Ridiculous Hyperbole" for $1000, Alex.

    If you actually bothered to study non-M$ OSes you would find that 15 years is a pretty good estimate.

    The Amiga supported multiple mice 20 years ago. Lemmings on the Amiga did this so you had 1 computer, 1 monitor, 2 mice, and 2 pointers on the screen. They removed the feature from the Windows version because the OS couldn't handle it. Only recently has M$ learned to handle multiple, simultaneous inputs, so they can support their spiffy 'new' multi-touch pads and displays.

  228. Re:Where's the Microsoft ~= to Mac OS X family pac by jsiren · · Score: 1

    Okay, I'll bite.
    Release dates:
    2001: OSX 10.0/.1, Windows XP
    (four OS X versions later)
    2007: OSX 10.5, Vista (retail)

    5 user upgrades from XP to Vista Home Premium at $129 ea = $645

    4 OS upgrades for OSX (5 pack, since you'd upgrade all 5 people) @ $200/5pk = $800

    Then again, our two Macs are happily running Panther (10.3) and Tiger (10.4), respectively. The idea of upgrading has crossed my mind, but not very seriously, because they both work fine. Only the older one might benefit from a newer version of iLife - newer, not the newest.

    --
    Usage: km/h for speed (kilometers per hour); kph for very slow impulses (kilopond hours).
  229. FUD by CountBrass · · Score: 1

    "under-clocked-as-standard graphics card" oh really? First clue you didn't rally buy a MBP. "over a thousand pounds" for a MBP? And there's the second: MBPs cost closer to two thousand.

    Perhaps you bought a Dell without realising because you strike me as being stupid enough.

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    1. Re:FUD by somersault · · Score: 1

      What are you blabbering on about?

      http://www.google.co.uk/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUK294&=&q=macbook+pro&btnG=Google+Search&meta=lr%3D

      All Macbooks Pros are around 1100-1600 pounds. That's POUNDS, not dollars. Mine was 1300 a couple of years back.

      Second, http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/06/04/21/apple_underclocking_macbook_pro_graphics_cards.html

      If you're going to call someone stupid, try doing a little research first, or you'll end up looking like an imbecile. Like just now.

      --
      which is totally what she said
  230. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by sexconker · · Score: 1

    SO MUCH FAIL

    Let's grab the cheapest shit on Newegg.

    $34 gets an 80 GB HDD
    $50 gets an ATi 4650 with 512 MB of slow ass RAM
    $16 for a DVD drive (let's face it - games come on DVDs now, and the only thing cheaper was a PATA CD ROM)

    We're at $100!

    $35 for the cheapest motherboard
    $40 for a 1.8 GHz single-core Conroe
    (The cheapest mobo/cpu combo was over $80)
    $18 for the cheapest 2 GB ram kit
    $24 for the cheapest case
    $16 for the cheapest PSU with 2 SATA connectors

    That's $233. No free shipping on anything, either, like you get with Dell.

    You won't be playing any modern games on this turd.

    Oh, and you need a mouse, keyboard, OS license, and monitor. You get all this included with the $500 Dell (as well as a second OS license, LOL). Oh, and the Dell blows this piece of shit out of the water performance-wise.

  231. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by maharb · · Score: 1

    Have you checked prices for PC parts lately? I would not say it's cheaper to PC game than XBox but you can build a powerful enough PC to play all modern games for about $700 if you are getting the right parts and keep your system clean. Keep in mind you also probably need a computer for other things so spending an extra $200 can make that shitty workstation you were going to buy into a gaming PC.

  232. WHO IS TAXING WHO AGAIN??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just take a gander at Microsft(MSFT) and Apple (AAPL) pulbic balance sheets released over the last 5 years and take a hard look at the average Gross Profit Margins (GPM).

    Apple (AAPL) ~ 30-35% profit

    Microsoft (MSFT) ~ 80-85% profit

    With Microsoft making almost 3 times the profit of Apple on what is subjectly and objectly a lower quality product...

    WHO IS TAXING WHO AGAIN???

  233. Re:Funny how they don't mention their hidden taxes by COMON$ · · Score: 1
    Hey I didnt say it would be better than an OEM, and no, getting all your parts from newegg will cost quite a bit. Go for refurbs on tigerdirect. I think I saw some pretty good Dells on there just today for $170 or so. Hell I have seen brand new dells go for $190 with a P4 in em.

    If you want to achieve the mythical Sub $200 PC you have to cut corners, used parts and whatnot. There are P4 CPUs and ASUS mobos to be had for pennies. You wont get 3 year old P4s at newegg (Which are overkill for any game I have ever heard of. Check Craigslist and Ebay. We arent going for quality here. Local auctions and garage sales often have PCs for $4-$50 that have a dead hard drive and are only a couple years old. Not to mention an easy $15 at your local university for an OS or free if you are a wine geek but not very many gamers are that OS proficient.

    But even with that as you said, you can get a much better OEM PC from HP or dell for a little more. Personally I look at the sub $200 PC as a good challenge, not everyone is up for it but it can be done, you just have to shop carefully, hit up deals and rebates, and not be afraid to get your hands dirty.

    I usually tell people $500 for a damn good rig without monitor. You shouldn't have to spend more than $1000 on a full out bragging rights gaming machine. Completely tricked out.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
  234. Office Templates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a start, the templates for Pages (in iWorks) are good enough to actually use.

    In MS- and Open- Office, they are pretty awful.

    BTW - my mac is a G4, 90% of the time I use Linux.

  235. "PC" = "Windows" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Windows virus = computer virus.